| Literature DB >> 18455127 |
Nikolas H Stoecklein1, Stefan B Hosch, Martin Bezler, Franziska Stern, Claudia H Hartmann, Christian Vay, Annika Siegmund, Peter Scheunemann, Paulus Schurr, Wolfram T Knoefel, Pablo E Verde, Uta Reichelt, Andreas Erbersdobler, Roger Grau, Axel Ullrich, Jakob R Izbicki, Christoph A Klein.
Abstract
The increasing use of primary tumors as surrogate markers for prognosis and therapeutic decisions neglects evolutionary aspects of cancer progression. To address this problem, we studied the precursor cells of metastases directly for the identification of prognostic and therapeutic markers and prospectively analyzed single disseminated cancer cells from lymph nodes and bone marrow of 107 consecutive esophageal cancer patients. Whole-genome screening revealed that primary tumors and lymphatically and hematogenously disseminated cancer cells diverged for most genetic aberrations. However, we identified chromosome 17q12-21, the region comprising HER2, as the most frequent gain in disseminated tumor cells that were isolated from both ectopic sites. Survival analysis demonstrated that HER2 gain in a single disseminated tumor cell but not in primary tumors conferred high risk for early death.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18455127 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2008.04.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743