| Literature DB >> 22550426 |
Lars M Wagner1, Teresa A Smolarek, Janos Sumegi, Daniel Marmer.
Abstract
Advances in molecular pathology now allow for identification of rare tumor cells in cancer patients. Identification of this minimal residual disease is particularly relevant for Ewing sarcoma, given the potential for recurrence even after complete remission is achieved. Using RT-PCR to detect specific tumor-associated fusion transcripts, otherwise occult tumor cells are found in blood or bone marrow in 20-30% of Ewing sarcoma patients, and their presence is associated with inferior outcomes. Although RT-PCR has excellent sensitivity and specificity for identifying tumor cells, technical challenges may limit its widespread applicability. The use of flow cytometry to identify tumor-specific antigens is a recently described method that may circumvent these difficulties. In this manuscript, we compare the advantages and drawbacks of these approaches, present data on a third method using fluorescent in situ hybridization, and discuss issues affecting the further development of these strategies.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22550426 PMCID: PMC3329667 DOI: 10.1155/2012/780129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Summary of Key Studies Using RT-PCR for MRD Detection in Ewing Sarcoma.
| Author [Reference] | N (pts) | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Peter [ | 36 | 31% had MRD in either blood or marrow at diagnosis at diagnosis |
| Pfeiderer [ | 16 | 38% had MRD in BM, while only 6% had CTC at diagnosis |
| West [ | 28 | 25% of newly diagnosed localized pts had MRD in blood or marrow, compared to 50% with relapsed/metastatic disease |
| Fagnou [ | 67 | 26% of patients had MRD in blood at diagnosis, but this was not correlated with clinical features or outcome.33% of patients had BM MRD, with worse outcome |
| De Alava [ | 28 | MRD in blood and/or marrow developed prior to clinical progression |
| Zoubek [ | 35 | 7/23 (30%) had BM MRD at diagnosis, but this did not predict relapse |
| Thomson [ | 9 | Survival was correlated with speed of clearance of MRD in blood and BM |
| Sumerauer [ | 22 | MRD in marrow found in 31% of localized and 50% of metastatic pts |
| Merino [ | 12 | Quantitative RT-PCR can be used to measure efficacy of stem cell purging methods |
| Schleiermacher [ | 172 | MRD in blood or BM at diagnosis is associated with worse survival in patients with otherwise localized disease |
| Avigad [ | 26 | 43% of pts had marrow MRD at diagnosisMRD developed prior to clinical recurrence in 10 of 11 patients |
| Yaniv [ | 11 | Tumor cells frequently contaminate stem cell harvests, and are associated with relapse after transplantation.Relapse is preceded by MRD in BM and/or blood |
MRD, minimal residual disease; BM, bone marrow.
Figure 1Sequential gating to identify Ewing sarcoma cells. Cultured A673 cells undergo sequential gating to identify Ewing sarcoma cells. Mononuclear cells are separated from blood or marrow by density gradient centrifugation, stained with monoclonal antibodies (CD99 PE, CD45 FITC, CD14 PerCP, CD34 APC), exposed to anti-PE magnetic microbeads to enrich CD99+ cells using MACS technology (Miltenyi Biotec, Cologne, Germany), and then analyzed by flow cytometry. Analysis is performed using sequential gating strategy (gates 1–5) to purify the CD99 bright positive CD45 negative tumor cells as shown in this example of A673 Ewing sarcoma culture cells.
Figure 2Example of how enrichment can improve the identification of cultures A673 Ewing sarcoma cells mixed with peripheral blood mononuclear cells: (a) No tumor cells are identified in a healthy volunteer blood sample analysis not containing tumor cells (negative control). (b) Conventional flow cytometry without enrichment identifies equivocal findings of a single event (red dot) in a sample containing one A673 Ewing sarcoma cell per 1 × 106 pbmc. (c) In contrast, use of enrichment technique allows for confident identification of tumor cells (e.g., cluster of 5 or more events) that are CD99+/CD45- in a sample containing one A673 cell per 1 × 106 pbmc. (d) Positive control containing only A673 tumor cells.
Figure 3Use of FISH to detect Ewing sarcoma cells. (a) Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) signal pattern for normal cells using the EWSR1 break-apart probe (Abbott Molecular) showing two fusion signals (red and green signal next to each other with little to no gap in between the signals), which is the normal pattern. (b) FISH signal pattern from normal cells with an occasional false-positive signal pattern (separation of one of the red and green signal pairs with a gap between the two signals wider than the size of one signal alone; see arrows) for EWSR1 rearrangement. (c) In a sample containing Ewing sarcoma, there is widespread separation of one signal pair in multiple tumor cells (labeled as 1R1G1F), compared to normal cells (labeled as 2F).