| Literature DB >> 25521853 |
Ju-Yu Tseng1, Chih-Yung Yang2, Shu-Ching Liang3, Ren-Shyan Liu4, Jeng-Kai Jiang5, Chi-Hung Lin6.
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can be detected in the blood of different types of early or advanced cancer using immunology-based assays or nucleic acid methods. The detection and quantification of CTCs has significant clinical utility in the prognosis of metastatic breast, prostate, and colorectal cancers. CTCs are a heterogeneous population of cells and often different from those of their respective primary tumor. Understanding the biology of CTCs may provide useful predictive information for the selection of the most appropriate treatment. Therefore, CTC detection and characterization could become a valuable tool to refine prognosis and serve as a "real-time biopsy" and has the potential to guide precision cancer therapies, monitor cancer treatment, and investigate the process of metastasis.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25521853 PMCID: PMC4276972 DOI: 10.3390/cancers6042369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
CTC enrichment approach.
| Technology | Rationale | Platform | Product | Selected reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical properties | Cell size | Physical filter | ISET/RARECELL | [ |
| Antibody capture | Positive selection of Epithelial-specific antigen | CTC Chips | Early in development | [ |
Positive/negative markers for enrichment and detection of CTCs in different tumor types.
| Tumor Types | Positive Markers | Negative Makers |
|---|---|---|
| Breast | EpCAM/CK | CD45/CD61 |
| Prostate | EpCAM/CK | CD45 |
| Colon | EpCAM/CK | CD45 |
| Lung | EpCAM/CK | CD45 |
Advantages and disadvantages of CTC detection approach.
| Platform | Rationale | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleic acid method | Epithelial/Tumor/Tissue-specific antigen |
High sensitivity Small blood volume required Rapid |
Cells need to be lysed Low specificity CTC without Epithelial marker could not be detected |
| Flow cytometery | Positive selection of Epithelial-specific antigen |
Quantitative and multiparameter High specificity Potential to sort CTCs |
Limited sensitivity Requirement for large sample volume CTC without epithelial marker could not be detected |
| CellSearch (Veridex) | Positive selection of EpCAM/CK |
High sensitivity and specificity Highly reproducible Commercially available Only assay with FDA approval | CTC without epithelial marker could not be detected |
| CTC Chip | Positive selection of EpCAM/CK |
High sensitivity and specificity Potential to recover CTCs for additional characterization | Technology is not commercially available |
Figure 1The number of circulating tumor cells in CRC and lung cancer patients (A) Cells isolated from fresh blood drawn from the mesenteric vein of CRC patients were subjected to surface marker staining and FACS analysis. The percentage of CTCs was quantified by counting CD45dim ESA+ cells among all mononucleated cells. The average number of CTCs is higher in patients with stage II CRC, than in patients with stage I, III, and IV; (B) Fresh blood samples from the forearm vein of lung cancer patients were subjected to surface marker staining and FACS analysis. CTCs are calculated in the lung cancer patients of different clinical stages. The number of CTCs detected from forearm vein of clinical stage I/II lung cancer patients are higher than those of stages III and IV.