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An NRG Oncology/GOG study of molecular classification for risk prediction in endometrioid endometrial cancer

Authors :
Paul J. Goodfellow
David Tritchler
Nilsa C. Ramirez
David Miller
Adrian A. Suarez
Lisa M. Landrum
David E. Cohn
Heather A. Lankes
Craig M. Rush
Paul DiSilvestro
Richard J. Zaino
Cynthia Timmers
Floor J. Backes
William T. Creasman
Shashikant Lele
Michael L. Pearl
David G. Mutch
Casey Cosgrove
Matthew A. Powell
Melissa A. Geller
Source :
Gynecologic Oncology. 148:174-180
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Objectives The purpose of this study was to assess the prognostic significance of a simplified, clinically accessible classification system for endometrioid endometrial cancers combining Lynch syndrome screening and molecular risk stratification. Methods Tumors from NRG/GOG GOG210 were evaluated for mismatch repair defects (MSI, MMR IHC, and MLH1 methylation), POLE mutations , and loss of heterozygosity. TP53 was evaluated in a subset of cases. Tumors were assigned to four molecular classes. Relationships between molecular classes and clinicopathologic variables were assessed using contingency tests and Cox proportional methods. Results Molecular classification was successful for 982 tumors. Based on the NCI consensus MSI panel assessing MSI and loss of heterozygosity combined with POLE testing, 49% of tumors were classified copy number stable (CNS), 39% MMR deficient, 8% copy number altered (CNA) and 4% POLE mutant. Cancer-specific mortality occurred in 5% of patients with CNS tumors; 2.6% with POLE tumors; 7.6% with MMR deficient tumors and 19% with CNA tumors. The CNA group had worse progression-free (HR 2.31, 95%CI 1.53–3.49) and cancer-specific survival (HR 3.95; 95%CI 2.10–7.44). The POLE group had improved outcomes, but the differences were not statistically significant. CNA class remained significant for cancer-specific survival (HR 2.11; 95%CI 1.04–4.26) in multivariable analysis. The CNA molecular class was associated with TP53 mutation and expression status. Conclusions A simple molecular classification for endometrioid endometrial cancers that can be easily combined with Lynch syndrome screening provides important prognostic information. These findings support prospective clinical validation and further studies on the predictive value of a simplified molecular classification system.

Details

ISSN :
00908258
Volume :
148
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gynecologic Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....35b4ac55446ec421c9c16da09aee2813