| Literature DB >> 26322014 |
Lukasz A Adamczyk1, Hannah Williams2, Aleksandra Frankow3, Hayley Patricia Ellis2, Harry R Haynes2, Claire Perks3, Jeff M P Holly3, Kathreena M Kurian2.
Abstract
Detection of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood via so-called "liquid biopsies" carries enormous clinical potential in malignancies of the central nervous system (CNS) because of the potential to follow disease evolution with a blood test, without the need for repeat neurosurgical procedures with their inherent risk of patient morbidity. To date, studies in non-CNS malignancies, particularly in breast cancer, show increasing reproducibility of detection methods for these rare tumor cells in the circulation. However, no method has yet received full recommendation to use in clinical practice, in part because of lack of a sufficient evidence base regarding clinical utility. In CNS malignancies, one of the main challenges is finding a suitable biomarker for identification of these cells, because automated systems, such as the widely used Cell Search system, are reliant on markers, such as the epithelial cell adhesion molecule, which are not present in CNS tumors. This review examines methods for CTC enrichment and detection, and reviews the progress in non-CNS tumors and the potential for using this technique in human brain tumors.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cells; epithelial–mesenchymal transition; glioblastoma multiforme; glioma; liquid biopsy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26322014 PMCID: PMC4530310 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Row (A) demonstrates methods of biological CTC enrichment using magnetically labeled antibodies captured in a magnetic chamber or by posts or rods. Row (B) illustrates physical enrichment methods: membrane filtration, microfluidics, Ficoll gradient centrifugation, Dean drag forces separation, and dielectrophoresis. Row (C) outlines the most common principles of cell enumeration: IHC, RT-PCR, fluorescent antibody labeling, invasion assay, or antibody-coated beads. Based on Alix-Panabieres and Pantel (46) with permission.
Summary of studies attempting to isolate CTCs from patients with high-grade gliomas.
| Author | Cell enrichment | Cell characterization | Results | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Müller et al. ( | MNCs isolated by Ficoll density gradient centrifugation | GBM patients | Low detection rate | |
| Cytospins prepared from MNCs GFAP positive single cells isolated by micromanipulation | Chromogenic and fluorescent IHC (GFAP, CD45, EGFR) | Observed association between EGFR amplification and release of CTCs Common genomic aberrations in CTCs and GBM tumors | ||
| Further characterization of CTCs and associated tumor | ||||
| Comparative genomic hybridization | ||||
| Sequence analysis | ||||
| FISH | ||||
| Sullivan et al. ( | Blood processed through a CTC-iChip® (magnetically tagged CD45 and CD16) | GBM patients | Limited dataset | |
| IF-guided single-cell micromanipulation used to isolate single CTCs (EGFR, MET and CDH11) | IHC glioma marker panel [SOX2, Tubulin, beta-3, EGFR, A2B5 and c-MET (STEAM)] | RNA-ISH demonstrated an enrichment for mesenchymal transcripts and a reduction of neural differentiation markers | Could not determine whether surgical or radiation induced disruption of the blood–brain barrier enhances CTC dissemination | |
| FISH used to determine EGFR gene amplification in CTCs from known amplified cases | ||||
| Further CTC characterization by qRT-PCR and dual color RNA-ISH assay | ||||
| MacArthur et al. ( | Blood samples centrifuged in OncoQuick tubes | High-grade glioma patients | Limited pilot data | |
| Incubated with a telomerase-responsive adenoviral probe (via GFP expression) Secondary Immunofluorescence (Nestin and EGFR) | Need more serial measurements throughout the treatment and disease course for each patient | |||
| EGFR amplification in CTCs correlates with solid tumors | Telomerase is elevated in other tumor histologies | |||
| Böhm et al. ( | Total cellular RNA extracted from whole blood using the QIAmp RNA blood mini kit (Qiagen) | High-grade astrocytoma and GBM patients | Sample size | |
| RT-qPCR assay for the detection of mRNA encoding GFAP and B2M (positive control) | Insufficient technology | |||
| Martens et al. ( | Cytocentrifugation | Astrocytoma patient | Only one patient and sample tested | |
| Chromogenic and fluorescent IHC (GFAP) | Insufficient technology | |||