Inicio  /  Cancers  /  Vol: 13 Par: 14 (2021)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

A Nationwide Study on the Impact of Routine Testing for EGFR Mutations in Advanced NSCLC Reveals Distinct Survival Patterns Based on EGFR Mutation Subclasses

Bart Koopman    
Betzabel N. Cajiao Garcia    
Chantal C. H. J. Kuijpers    
Ronald A. M. Damhuis    
Anthonie J. van der Wekken    
Harry J. M. Groen    
Ed Schuuring    
Stefan M. Willems and Léon C. van Kempen    

Resumen

The presence of an EGFR activating mutation in tumors of non-small-cell lung cancer patients enables effective targeted therapy towards EGFR. Studies that describe a nationwide uptake of EGFR testing, the impact of the switch from single-gene EGFR to multi-gene testing, and the clinical response towards EGFR inhibitors in first-line treatment are limited. From 2013 to 2017 the percentage of patients routinely tested for EGFR mutations increased from 73% to 81% in the Netherlands. A strong shift towards EGFR testing as part of a multi-gene next generation sequencing analysis was observed. However, this did not change the percentage of EGFR mutations that were reported for this patient population, which remained stable at 12%. When treated with EGFR inhibitors that were available in a routine clinical setting prior to 2018, clear differences were observed between the type of EGFR mutation and survival.

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