Predictors of Invasiveness in Adenocarcinoma of Lung with Lepidic Growth Pattern.
Timothy J YoungRamin Salehi-RadReza RonaghiJane YanagawaPuja ShahroukiBianca E VillegasBrian ConeGregory A FishbeinWilliam D WallaceFereidoun AbtinIgor Z BarjaktarevicPublished in: Medical sciences (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Lung adenocarcinoma with lepidic growth pattern (LPA) is characterized by tumor cell proliferation along intact alveolar walls, and further classified as adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS), minimally invasive adenocarcinoma (MIA) and invasive lepidic predominant adenocarcinoma (iLPA). Accurate diagnosis of lepidic lesions is critical for appropriate prognostication and management as five-year survival in patients with iLPA is lower than in those with AIS and MIA. We aimed to evaluate the accuracy of CT-guided core needle lung biopsy classifying LPA lesions and identify clinical and radiologic predictors of invasive disease in biopsied lesions. Thirty-four cases of adenocarcinoma with non-invasive lepidic growth pattern on core biopsy pathology that subsequently were resected between 2011 and 2018 were identified. Invasive LPA vs. non-invasive LPA (AIS or MIA) was defined based on explant pathology. Histopathology of core biopsy and resected tumor specimens was compared for concordance, and clinical, radiologic and pathologic variables were analyzed to assess for correlation with invasive disease. The majority of explanted tumors (70.6%) revealed invasive disease. Asian race ( p = 0.03), history of extrathoracic malignancy ( p = 0.02) and absence of smoking history ( p = 0.03) were associated with invasive disease. CT-measured tumor size was not associated with invasiveness ( p = 0.15). CT appearance of density ( p = 0.61), shape ( p = 0.78), and margin ( p = 0.24) did not demonstrate a significant difference between the two subgroups. Invasiveness of tumors with lepidic growth patterns can be underestimated on transthoracic core needle biopsies. Asian race, absence of smoking, and history of extrathoracic malignancy were associated with invasive disease.
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