Erlotinib in Lung Cancer — Molecular and Clinical Predictors of Outcome
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research · University of Toronto · +4 more institutions
Abstract
A clinical trial that compared erlotinib with a placebo for non-small-cell lung cancer demonstrated a survival benefit for erlotinib. We used tumor-biopsy samples from participants in this trial to investigate whether responsiveness to erlotinib and its impact on survival were associated with expression by the tumor of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and EGFR gene amplification and mutations.
EGFR expression was evaluated immunohistochemically in non-small-cell lung cancer specimens from 325 of 731 patients in the trial; 197 samples were analyzed for EGFR mutations; and 221 samples were analyzed for the number of EGFR genes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 162.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
19- MTMing‐Sound TsaoCorresponding
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, University of Toronto, Cancer Institute (WIA), Princess Margaret Cancer Centre
- ASAkira Sakurada
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, University of Toronto, Cancer Institute (WIA)
- JCJean-Claude Cutz
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, University of Toronto, Cancer Institute (WIA)
- CZChang‐Qi Zhu
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, University of Toronto, Cancer Institute (WIA)
- SKSuzanne Kamel‐Reid
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, University of Toronto, Cancer Institute (WIA)
Topics & keywords
- Erlotinib
- Medicine
- Lung cancer
- Epidermal growth factor receptor
- Oncology
- Internal medicine
- Clinical trial
- Erlotinib Hydrochloride
- Good health and well-being