Abstract 147P
Background
The tumor-agnostic indication of immune checkpoint inhibitors to treat cancers with mismatch repair deficiency (dMMR)/microsatellite instability (MSI) increased the demand for such tests beyond Lynch syndrome. International guideline recommendations accept immunohistochemistry (IHC) for dMMR or molecular techniques (PCR, NGS) for MSI status determination tests equal, although there are scattered reports contradicting to this presumption.
Methods
We have directly compared four protein MMR immunohistochemistry to MSI Pentaplex PCR tests in a large cancer patient cohort (n=1306) of our diagnostic center where the two tests have been run parallel in 703 cases.
Results
We have found a high discrepancy rate (19.3%) of the two tests, independent of the tumor types. The MSI PCR sensitivity for MMR IHC status was found to be low (41.1%) with relatively low positive (91.6%) and negative (80.5%) predicting values. Therefore, the correlation of the two tests was low (kappa<0.7). During analysis of the possible contributing factors of this poor performance, we have excluded low tumor percentage of the samples, but identified dMMR phenotypes (classic versus non-classic or unusual) as possible contributors, since the sensitivities of PCR were very different (62.7%, 37.2%, 5.1%, respectively).
Conclusions
Our study challenges the perception that the MSI PCR and MMR IHC are equal predictive tests which might have clinical relevance.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Department of Pathology, Forensic and Insurance Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
183P - Development of a cadherin-17 (CDH17) immunohistochemistry assay for use as a companion diagnostic for cabotamig in gastrointestinal cancers
Presenter: Dennis Wong
Session: Poster session 08
184P - From breast and gastric to beyond: Expanding HER2 detection in solid tumors using quantitative RNA and protein analysis
Presenter: Kristian Egebjerg
Session: Poster session 08
185P - Multi-omics profiling and clinical characterization of colon-like cancer of unknown primary (CUP)
Presenter: Maria Pouyiourou
Session: Poster session 08
186P - Differences in antigen and immune marker expression in lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma (LELC) and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC): A multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC), spatial transcriptomic and multiplex immunofluorescence (mIF)-based analysis
Presenter: Daniel Peh
Session: Poster session 08
187P - Organoid growth-based oncological sensitivity test (OncoSensi) for predicting radiation therapy outcomes in pharyngeal and esophageal cancer
Presenter: Dong Woo Lee
Session: Poster session 08
188P - Integration of immunohistochemistry and transcriptomics reveals new insights into the immune landscape of soft-tissue sarcomas
Presenter: Giulia Petroni
Session: Poster session 08
189P - An image-based deep learning prediction model for characterization of the drug tolerant persister cell state
Presenter: Lauren Cech
Session: Poster session 08
190P - A large scale proteogenomics atlas for precision oncology research
Presenter: Timothy Anthony Yap
Session: Poster session 08
191P - Understanding and overcoming resistance to selective FGFR inhibitors across FGFR2-driven tumors
Presenter: Francesco Facchinetti
Session: Poster session 08
192P - Use of biosimulation to predict homologous recombination deficiency and PARPi benefit in patients with ovarian, pancreatic, prostate and triple negative breast cancers
Presenter: Daniel Palmer
Session: Poster session 08