| Literature DB >> 27302574 |
Annkathrin Hanssen1, Jenny Wagner2, Tobias M Gorges1, Aline Taenzer1,3, Faik G Uzunoglu4, Christiane Driemel5, Nikolas H Stoecklein5, Wolfram T Knoefel5, Sebastian Angenendt5, Siegfried Hauch2, Djordje Atanackovic6, Sonja Loges1,6, Sabine Riethdorf1, Klaus Pantel1, Harriet Wikman1.
Abstract
Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) serve as valuable biomarkers. However, EpCAM positive CTCs are less frequently detected in NSCLC patients compared to other epithelial tumours. First, EpCAM protein expression was analysed in primary and metastatic lung cancer tissue. In both groups 21% of the samples were EpCAM negative. Second, the CellSearch system identified 15% of patients (n = 48) as CTC positive whereas a multiplex RT-PCR for PIK3CA, AKT2, TWIST, and ALDH1 following EGFR, HER2 and EpCAM based enrichment detected CTCs in 29% of the patients. Interestingly, 86% of CTC positive patients were found to express ALDH1. Only 11% of the patients were CTC-positive by both techniques. CTC positivity was associated with patient disease state when assessed by the multiplex RT-PCR assay (p = 0.015). Patients harbouring tumours with an altered EGFR genotype were more frequently CTC-positive compared to patients with EGFR wildtype tumours. In subsets of patients, CTCs were found to express genes involved in resistance to therapy such as HER3 and MET. In conclusion, using multiple targets for CTC capture and identification increases the sensitivity of CTC detection in NSCLC patients, which can be explained by the presence of different CTC subtypes with distinct molecular features.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27302574 PMCID: PMC4908396 DOI: 10.1038/srep28010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1EpCAM protein expression and distribution in primary and metastatic lung cancer tissue.
EpCAM IHC staining was performed on tissue microarrays from (a) primary NSCLC tumour tissue (PT; n = 47) and from (b) lung cancer brain metastases (BM; n = 62). Representative tissues of a strong (left), intermediate (centre) and negative (right) staining are shown (200x magnified, Axioplan 2 Imaging, Zeiss). (c) EpCAM frequency distribution in primary lung and brain metastatic tissue. EpCAM expression was analysed and quantified by microscopic analysis of two independent scientists.
Figure 2NSCLC CTC positivity rates detected by CellSearch and Adna mRT-PCR test.
(a) The mRT-PCR detected CTCs in 29% and CellSearch in 15% of NSCLC patients (n = 48). The combined CTC status revealed a significantly increased CTC burden compared to CellSearch alone (40% versus 15%, p = 0.008). (b) CTC positivity rates in different groups of patients. The cohort was grouped into operated patients M0 (n = 17), chemo-naïve (n = 9) and -treated patients M1, the latter either in a progressive (n = 10) or non-progressive (n = 12) state. (c) Gene expression on Adna-EMT-2 isolated CTCs. PIK3CA, AKT2, TWIST and ALDH1 gene expression were measured by mRT-PCR.
Therapy-resistance related gene expression on CTCs: Additional RT-qPCR with the target genes ERCC1, MET, HER3, JAG1 and VIM was performed and CTC positivity was compared to mRT-PCR results.
| Patient | Group | Treatment | Adna- EMT2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M0 | – | pos | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 2 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg | neg |
| 3 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | pos | neg |
| 4 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg | neg |
| 5 | M0 | – | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 6 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg | neg |
| 7 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg | neg |
| 8 | M0 | – | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg | neg |
| 9 | pre-chemo | – | pos | pos | pos | pos | pos | pos |
| 10 | pre-chemo | – | pos | pos | neg | pos | pos | pos |
| 11 | progress | chemotherapy | pos | pos | neg | pos | pos | pos |
| 12 | progress | chemotherapy | pos | pos | neg | pos | pos | pos |
| 13 | progress | chemotherapy | pos | neg | neg | neg | neg | pos |
| 14 | progress | TKI, chemotherapy | pos | neg | neg | pos | neg | neg |
| 15 | progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 16 | progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 17 | progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 18 | progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 19 | non-progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 20 | non-progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 21 | non-progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
| 22 | non-progress | chemotherapy | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg | neg |
85.7% of mRT-PCR positive cases were also identified positive by the RT-qPCR.
Figure 3Association between CTC positivity and clinicopathological parameters.
(a,b) CellSearch CTC positivity and (c,d) mRT-PCR CTC positivity in relation with the presence of lymph node metastases and the size of the primary tumour.
Figure 4CTC positivity in patients with multiple metastases and altered EGFR primary tumours.
(a) CellSearch versus mRT-PCR CTC positivity. The mRT-PCR detects more CTC positive patients in a single metastatic disease setting. (b) mRT-PCR CTC positivity in relation to EGFR genotype: Patients with an altered EGFR genotype in the primary tumour including EGFR mutations, amplification, and polysomy are more frequently CTC positive compared to wildtype primary tumours when using the mRT-PCR.