lunes, 18 de junio de 2012

Clinical utility of gene-expression profiling for... [Oncotarget. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI

Clinical utility of gene-expression profiling for... [Oncotarget. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI

Oncotarget. 2012 Jun 9. [Epub ahead of print]

Clinical utility of gene-expression profiling for tumor-site origin in patients with metastatic or poorly differentiated cancer: impact on diagnosis, treatment, and survival.

Source

Department of Medicine, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.

Abstract

PURPOSE:

The primary tissue-site origin in over 4% of cancers remains uncertain despite thorough clinicopathological evaluation. This study assessed the effect of a Food and Drug Administration-cleared 2,000- gene-expression-profiling (GEP) test on primary tissue-site working diagnoses and management for metastatic and poorly differentiated cancers.

METHODS:

Clinical information was collected from physicians ordering the GEP test for patients with difficult to diagnose cancers. Endpoints included diagnostic procedures, physicians' working diagnoses and treatment recommendations before and after GEP result availability, and physician reports of the test's usefulness for clinical decision making. Patient date of death was obtained, with a minimum of one year follow-up from date of biopsy.

RESULTS:

Sixty-five physicians participated in the study (n=107 patients). Before GEP, patients underwent 3.2 investigations on average (e.g., radiology, endoscopy). Ten immunohistochemistry tests were used per biopsy (SD 5.2). After GEP testing, physicians changed the primary working diagnosis for 50% of patients (95% CI: 43%,58%) and management for 65% of patients (95% CI: 58%,73%). With GEP results, the recommendation for guidelineconsistent chemotherapy increased from 42% to 65% of patients, and the recommendation for non-guideline-consistent regimens declined from 28% to 13%. At last follow-up, 69 patients had died, and median survival was 14.0 months (95% CI: 10.2,18.6). Thirty-three percent of patients were alive at 2 years.

CONCLUSION:

In patients with difficult-to-diagnose cancers, GEP changed the working diagnosis and management for the majority of patients. Patients for whom the GEP test was ordered had longer median survival than that historically reported for patients enrolled in treatment trials for cancer of unknown primary.

PMID:
22689213
[PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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