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FGFR2 in gastric cancer: protein overexpression predicts gene amplification and high H-index predicts poor survival

Authors :
Ahn, Soomin
Lee, Jeeyun
Hong, Mineui
Kim, Seung Tae
Park, Se Hoon
Choi, Min Gew
Lee, Jun-Ho
Sohn, Tae Sung
Bae, Jae Moon
Kim, Sung
Jung, Sin-Ho
Kang, Won Ki
Kim, Kyoung-Mee
Source :
Modern Pathology; September 2016, Vol. 29 Issue: 9 p1095-1103, 9p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

FGFR2gene amplification, and resulting FGFR2 protein overexpression, is rare in gastric cancer patients, and development of an accurate and widely available method for mass screening to identify patients who may respond to treatment with fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitors is important. We first screened 312 gastric cancer patients with known copy number variations by FGFR2b immunohistochemistry using FPR2-D, an isoform-specific antibody. Next, we performed immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays from 1574 gastric cancer patients. Selected cases were analyzed for FGFR2amplification by FISH. In addition, FGFR2b overexpression was studied in 88 matched primary and metastatic gastric cancers. In the first cohort, FGFR2b immunohistochemistry results correlated very well with those of copy number variation (r=0.79) and FISH (r=1.0). In total, FGFR2b overexpression was identified in 73 of 1974 gastric cancers (4%). The concordance between immunohistochemistry and FISH was extremely high; all 2+ and 3+ cases identified by immunohistochemistry were FGFR2amplified. In the matched primary and metastatic gastric cancer pairs, the positivity and percentage of positive tumor cells were significantly higher in metastatic gastric cancers than in primary gastric cancers (8% vs3% and 75% vs47%, respectively; P<0.001). FGFR2b overexpression was significantly more frequent in gastric cancers with diffuse subtype (P=0.01) and higher N stage (P=0.006). FGFR2b overexpression with H-score ≥150 were independent prognostic factors for overall survival with hazard ratio of 1.836 (95% confidence interval, 1.034–3.261; P=0.038). FGFR2b positivity in immunohistochemistry was strongly correlated with FGFR2amplification. Given the low frequency of FGFR2amplification in gastric cancers, FGFRb2 immunohistochemistry is an accurate screening tool to detect FGFR2amplification, and both primary and metastatic gastric cancer tissues should be tested to select gastric cancer patients for treatment with FGFR2 inhibitors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08933952 and 15300285
Volume :
29
Issue :
9
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Modern Pathology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62057815
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.2016.96