Molecular Cytogenetics (Dec 2012)

Incidence and patterns of <it>ALK</it> FISH abnormalities seen in a large unselected series of lung carcinomas

  • Dai Zunyan,
  • Kelly JoAnn C,
  • Meloni-Ehrig Aurelia,
  • Slovak Marilyn L,
  • Boles Debra,
  • Christacos Nicole C,
  • Bryke Christine R,
  • Schonberg Steven A,
  • Otani-Rosa Jennifer,
  • Pan Qiulu,
  • Ho Albert K,
  • Sanders Heather R,
  • Zhang Zhong J,
  • Jones Dan,
  • Mowrey Philip N

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1755-8166-5-44
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
p. 44

Abstract

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Abstract Background Anaplastic lymphoma receptor tyrosine kinase (ALK) gene rearrangements have been reported in 2-13% of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Patients with ALK rearrangements do not respond to EGFR-specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs); however, they do benefit from small molecule inhibitors targeting ALK. Results In this study, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using a break-apart probe for the ALK gene was performed on formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissue to determine the incidence of ALK rearrangements and hybridization patterns in a large unselected cohort of 1387 patients with a referred diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer (1011 of these patients had a histologic diagnosis of adenocarcinoma). The abnormal FISH signal patterns varied from a single split signal to complex patterns. Among 49 abnormal samples (49/1387, 3.5%), 32 had 1 to 3 split signals. Fifteen samples had deletions of the green 5′ end of the ALK signal, and 1 of these 15 samples showed amplification of the orange 3′ end of the ALK signal. Two patients showed a deletion of the 3′ALK signal. Thirty eight of these 49 samples (38/1011, 3.7%) were among the 1011 patients with confirmed adenocarcinoma. Five of 8 patients with ALK rearrangements detected by FISH were confirmed to have EML4-ALK fusions by multiplex RT-PCR. Among the 45 ALK-rearranged samples tested, only 1 EGFR mutation (T790M) was detected. Two KRAS mutations were detected among 24 ALK-rearranged samples tested. Conclusions In a large unselected series, the frequency of ALK gene rearrangement detected by FISH was approximately 3.5% of lung carcinoma, and 3.7% of patients with lung adenocarcinoma, with variant signal patterns frequently detected. Rare cases with coexisting KRAS and EGFR mutations were seen.

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