Pelosi Giuseppe, Barbareschi Mattia, Cavazza Alberto, Graziano Paolo, Rossi Giulio, Papotti Mauro
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Istituto Nazionale Tumori, Milan, Italy; Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences "Luigi Sacco", Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy.
Operative Unit of Pathology, Hospital S. Chiara, Trento, Italy.
Lung Cancer. 2015 Mar;87(3):226-31. doi: 10.1016/j.lungcan.2015.01.008. Epub 2015 Jan 17.
Large cell carcinoma (LCC) is a merely descriptive term indicating a subtype of lung cancer with no specific features of small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), adenocarcinoma (ADC) or squamous cell carcinoma (SQC). This diagnosis is allowed on surgical specimens only, whereas its counterpart in biopsy/cytology samples is non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), not otherwise specified (NOS). Although these two terms do not fulfill the same concept, they can be interchangeable synonyms at the clinical level, reflecting, in different ways, the inability to define a specific subtype. Immunohistochemistry (IHC), next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis and, historically, electron microscopy have been unveiling diverse cell differentiation lineages in LCC, resulting in LCC-favor ADC, LCC-favor SQC and LCC-favor large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC), the latter hopefully to be included into the neuroendocrine tumor (NET) group in the future. Paradoxically, however, the interpretation issues of LCC/NSCLC-NOS are not diminishing, but even increasing albeight an accurate diagnosis is oncologically required and crucial. Also, rare LCC/NSCLC-NOS cases exhibiting null/unclear phenotype, are difficult to classify, and this terminology could be maintained for the sake of classification (basically these tumors are serendipitous ADC, as also confirmed by the lack of p40). In this review article, seven relevant issues to LCC have been addressed by using a question-answer methodology, with final key points discussing major interpretation issues. In conclusion, most LCC/NSCLC-NOS may be eventually re-classified and addressed by exploiting IHC and/or molecular testing to satisfy the criteria of precision medicine (the right drug, to the right patient, at the right time).
大细胞癌(LCC)仅仅是一个描述性术语,指的是肺癌的一种亚型,不具有小细胞肺癌(SCLC)、腺癌(ADC)或鳞状细胞癌(SQC)的特定特征。该诊断仅适用于手术标本,而其在活检/细胞学样本中的对应诊断为非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC),未另行特指(NOS)。尽管这两个术语的概念不同,但在临床层面它们可以是可互换的同义词,以不同方式反映了无法明确特定亚型的情况。免疫组织化学(IHC)、二代测序(NGS)分析以及历史上的电子显微镜检查一直在揭示LCC中不同的细胞分化谱系,导致出现倾向于腺癌的LCC、倾向于鳞状细胞癌的LCC和倾向于大细胞神经内分泌癌(LCNEC)的LCC,后者有望在未来被纳入神经内分泌肿瘤(NET)组。然而,矛盾的是,LCC/NSCLC-NOS的解读问题并未减少,反而在增加,尽管准确诊断在肿瘤学上是必需的且至关重要。此外,罕见的表现为空/null/不明确表型的LCC/NSCLC-NOS病例难以分类,为了分类目的可以保留这个术语(基本上这些肿瘤是偶然发现的腺癌,p40缺乏也证实了这一点)。在这篇综述文章中,通过问答方法探讨了与LCC相关的七个问题,最后要点讨论了主要的解读问题。总之,大多数LCC/NSCLC-NOS最终可能通过利用IHC和/或分子检测进行重新分类和处理,以满足精准医学(在正确的时间,给正确的患者,用正确的药物)的标准。