Bronchoscopic Brushing from Central Lung Cancer —Next Generation Sequencing Results are Reliable

In this study, 50 consecutive subjects with suspected central lung cancer underwent bronchoscopic brushing (31 males, median age 70, 5 never smokers). Histological results were: NSCLC/SCLC/low-grade-NET/granulation tissue in 36/8/2/4 cases. Next generation sequencing (NGS) was feasible in 62% of tumor-positive brush smear samples. In 78% of these cases, NGS displayed identical results compared to histology samples, in 22% NGS from brush smears detected specific mutations, whereas DNA quality from forceps biopsy was insufficient for NGS analysis. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value of brush smear analysis were 66% (95% confidence interval 50 –79), 100% (40–100), 100% (85–100), and 21% (7–46). For the combined analysis of brush smear, brush tip washing and sheath tube content sensitivity was slightly elevated at 69% (53–81). In central lung cancer, bronchoscopic brushing detects tumor cells in about two-third of cases and allow s a decision for or against targeted therapy in the majority of tumor-positive cases on the basis of NGS analysis.
Source: Lung - Category: Respiratory Medicine Source Type: research