학술논문

Detection of ROSI rearrangement in non-small cell lung cancer: current and future perspectives
Document Type
Report
Source
Lung Cancer: Targets and Therapy. Annual, 2017, Vol. 8, p45, 11 p.
Subject
Oncogenes -- Health aspects
Non-small cell lung cancer -- Care and treatment -- Comparative analysis -- Genetic aspects -- Development and progression
Gene expression -- Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1179-2728
Abstract
ROSI rearrangement characterizes a small subset (l%-2%) of non-small cell lung cancer and is associated with slight/never smoking patients and adenocarcinoma histology. Identification of ROSI rearrangement is mandatory to permit targeted therapy with specific inhibitors, demonstrating a significantly better survival when compared with conventional chemotherapy. Detection of ROSI rearrangement is based on in situ (immunohistochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridization) and extractive non-in situ assays. While fluorescence in situ hybridization still represents the gold standard in clinical trials, this technique may fail to recognize rearrangements of ROSI with some gene fusion partner. On the other hand, immunohistochemistry is the most cost-effective screening technique, but it seems to be characterized by low specificity. Extractive molecular assays are expensive and laborious methods, but they specifically recognize almost all ROSI fusions using a limited amount of mRNA even from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor tissues. This review is a discussion on the present and futuristic diagnostic scenario of ROSI identification in lung cancer. Keywords: lung, adenocarcinoma, ROS1, FISH, immunohistochemistry, NGS, rearrangement
Introduction ROS1is a gene encoding a receptor tyrosine kinase; it is closely related to ALK and LTK and identified in several human tumors, including non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). (1-8) [...]