HHE Pathology 2019 | Page 14

PATHOLOGY AND DIAGNOSTICS Beyond diagnosis and classification: ‘the tissue is the issue’ In oncology immunotherapy, as in targeted therapy, the era of ‘one size fits all’ is past and the day-to-day work of pathologists is changing dramatically Massimo Barberis MD Elena Guerini-Rocco MD Clinic Unit of Histopathology and Molecular Diagnostics, Istituto Europeo di Oncologia, Milan, Italy Reference 1Kalemkerian G et al. Molecular testing guideline for the selection of patients with lung cancer for treatment with targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors: American Society of Clinical Oncology Endorsement of the College of American Pathologists/International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer/Association for Molecular Pathology Clinical Practice Guideline Update. J Clin Oncol 2018;36:911–19. Many hospitals with active oncology departments require access to pathology laboratories to enable a complete molecular profile of a tumour from relevant biopsies. At the same time, new drugs for targeted therapy and immunotherapy are becoming available and many of them are used in combination or sequentially to avoid resistance mechanisms. However, a consequence of this revolution in cancer treatment is that a new challenge is looming on the horizon for the pathologists: that is, to work beyond the diagnosis and classification and directly contribute to optimising rapid patient treatment with sustainable costs. The choice of analytical methods depends on clinical requirements, availability of space, expertise of the staff and dedicated budget. In our Unit, we chose a multimarker-approach based on next generation sequencing (NGS) platforms (for example, ThermoFisher Scientific). Serial testing takes time and depletes tumour tissue and the cost of single-gene methods scales linearly with the number of interrogated genes, which led us to choose our current approach. The ASCO endorsement of the College of American Pathologists/International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer/Association for Molecular Pathology Clinical Practice Guideline Update 1 stated that multiplexed panels are likely to be more efficient in terms of cost and tissue requirements than other technologies. Currently we receive 4000 requests of molecular tests per year mainly for advanced solid tumours (non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), colorectal carcinomas and malignant melanomas represent 80% of the samples). A panel of 22 genes (Oncomine Dx Solid Tumors) is offered to all the patients, whereas more complex panels (Oncomine Focus and Oncomine Comprehensive Assays) identifying not only mutations but also copy number variations, and fusion genes can be used in selected cases (Table 1). Immunotherapy is transforming oncology and its use in many solid tumours and Hodgkin’s lymphoma has become a stronghold in the changing landscape of cancer treatment. Immune checkpoint inhibition is exemplified by the TABLE 1 Example of targeted next generation sequencing in NSCLC Assay Company Gene# Technologies Data Clinical Clinical Fee routine trial paying pz CE-IVD Oncomine Solid Tumor DNA Custom DNA panel ThermoFisher 22 Scientific Ion AmpliSeq SNVs, Indels X ThermoFisher 26 Scientific Ion SNVs, AmpliSeq Indels X ThermoFisher 52 Ion SNVs, X X X Oncomine Focus Scientific AmpliSeq Indels, CNGs Asssay Fusiongenes Oncomine ThermoFisher 143/161 Ion X Comprehensive Scientific AmpliSeq Assay v1/v3 Foundation 324 Hybrid- SNVs, X FoundationOne Medicine capture Indels, CNVs Roche Fusiongenes TMB+MSI 14 HHE 2019 | hospitalhealthcare.com