1.Institute of Medical Oncology, University of Bern, 3010 Bern, Switzerland (DCB)
Adenocarcinoma:A further 30-50% of tumours are defined as adenocarcinomas (ADC). This tumour type is the most common in non-smokers and women and it is more frequently associated with pleural effusions and distant metastases. ADC may be further sub-classified into:
Large cell carcinoma:Approximately 10% of NSCLC are defined as large cell carcinomas (LCC). This is a diagnosis of exclusion. Where a poorly differentiated tumour has none of the defining features of SCLC, SCC or ADC it may be classified as LCC: that is, where the cells of the lesion are not-columnar in shape, do not contain mucous, do not show squamous differentiation, and do not have neuroendocrine properties or small cell characteristics. Tumours tend to consist of large cells with abundant cytoplasm, large nuclei and prominent nucleoli and they may occur peripherally or centrally. Variants of LCC include clear cell carcinoma, giant cell carcinoma and large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC).
Pre-invasive lesionsThe bronchial epithelium of the larger airways is a pseudo-stratified epidermal layer. The most frequent cell types present are ciliated columnar cells, interspersed mucous-producing goblet cells and, lying closely against the basement membrane, multi-potent basal epithelial cells. The basal (or reserve) cell has a repair capacity in that it is able to differentiate, as required, into the other mature cells of the larger conducting airways. In the smaller terminal and respiratory bronchioles, basal cells are not present. The reserve cells of these epithelia are the cuboidal, non-ciliated Clara cells. It has been suggested that the multi-potent basal cell or a stem cell precursor of such cells may represent a common lung cancer progenitor.
In chronic smokers, the cells of the tracheo-bronchial tree are repeatedly exposed to a range of carcinogenic compounds. Consequently, histologically-recognisable reactive and pre-neoplastic changes can generally be seen scattered throughout the airways of long-time smokers. In situ (pre-invasive) carcinoma (CIS: full thickness cytological atypia, increased nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio) is a recognised precursor of squamous cell carcinoma. This is the end of a spectrum of pre-neoplastic transformation that ranges from squamous metaplasia (change in appearance of cuboidal cells towards squamous morphology) through mild to severe dysplasia (loss of polarity, increasing disorder) to CIS. A second pre-neoplastic state is represented by Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia (AAH). This is a bronchioalveolar proliferation of slightly atypical cuboidal cells that falls short of the criteria for BAC: it is a recognised precursor to adenocarcinoma.
The amplification of chromosomal regions containing genes implicated in cell growth has also been reported in primary NSCLC, albeit at a relatively low frequency. Such data are suggestive of the involvement of these sequences in neoplasia but they are weaker than direct mutational evidence given that the amplified regions generally contain a number of distinct genes, the relative contributions of each of which to the tumour phenotype is usually unknown. Genes reported as amplified in primary lesions include CCND1, encoding cyclin D1 (11q13.3), TP73L, encoding p63 (3q28), KRAS2 (12p12), MYC (8q24.21) and EGFR (7p11.2).
A number of genes that are encoded from within chromosomal regions which show LOH or homozygous deletion in certain lesions have been identified. Such sequences may show a lack of expression in primary tumour cells compared to at least most of the cells in normal lung tissue. This lack of expression may in turn be correlated with hypermethylation of the relevant promoter sequence. Examples of such genes include RASSF1A (3p21) and CDKN2A (9p21.3). It is tempting to speculate that genes which show high levels of promoter methylation in tumour over normal tissue have been somatically inactivated by such methylation and are therefore likely to represent causally involved tumour suppressors. Whilst this may well be true in specific instances, especially where the gene in question is mutationally inactivated in a separate fraction of lesions (CDKN2), it may not be so generally, as the methylation level seen in the tumour may be completely appropriate for the cell type of origin of the particular lesion.
Whilst the data suggesting the involvement of an individual gene in a tumour type might not be compelling, when pathways or control points are considered, the evidence often becomes much stronger. The best example of this is perhaps damage to the genetic system controlling progression through the G1 restriction point of the cell cycle, beyond which the cell is committed to divide. Proteins intimately involved in this key decision point, cyclin D1, p16, and pRB are frequent targets of NSCLC miss-regulation and may be involved at the earliest stages of pre-neoplastic development.
Microarray analyses: Recent microarray analyses have shown that gene expression profiling can be used to sub-divide tumours into existing histological classes. Perhaps more importantly, analyses of adenocarcinoma series have demonstrated that sub-groups of stage 1 lesions with better or worse survival can be identified from their expression patterns. Such data suggest that tumour behaviour may be, at least to some point, fixed very early in the disease process. From a different perspective, many genes have been shown to be commonly differentially expressed (over-represented) in NSCLC compared to normal lung, to some extent at least, irrespective of general histology. Such genes are potential diagnostic targets. More importantly, the study of their function, normal expression patterns and mechanisms of expression control may shed considerable light on the biology of lung cancer and the characteristics of the cell type(s) of origin. Preliminary analyses of genomics and/or proteomics highlighted sequences (S100A2, SERPINB5 encoding maspin and TP73L, encoding p63) in lung tumours and pre-neoplastic lesions supports such hypotheses and raise the possibility that some measure of tumour gene expression may result from a failure to appropriately inactivate particular sequences involved in the self-renewal phenotype of stem-cell (like) progenitors. It is anticipated that in the future, further detailed molecular investigations of gene expression in disease and normal tissues will lead to new prognostic, predictive, diagnostic, therapeutic and preventative tools.
Jim Heighway ; Daniel C Betticher
Lung: Non-small cell carcinoma
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2004-02-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/solid-tumor/5141/js/css/lib/favicon/manifest.json