| Literature DB >> 28521303 |
Arun Satelli1, Izhar Batth1, Zachary Brownlee1, Abhishek Mitra1, Shouhao Zhou2, Hyangsoon Noh1, Christina R Rojas1, Heming Li1, Qing H Meng3, Shulin Li1.
Abstract
Recent advances in the field of circulating tumor cells (CTC) have shown promise in this liquid biopsy-based prognosis of patient outcome. However, not all of the circulating cells are tumor cells, as evidenced by a lack of tumor-specific markers. The current FDA standard for capturing CTCs (CellSearch) relies on an epithelial marker and cells captured via CellSearch cannot be considered to have undergone EMT. Therefore, it is difficult to ascertain the presence and relevance of any mesenchymal or EMT-like CTCs. To address this gap in technology, we recently discovered the utility of cell-surface vimentin (CSV) as a marker for detecting mesenchymal CTCs from sarcoma, breast, and colon cancer. Here we studied peripheral blood samples of 48 prostate cancer (PCA) patients including hormone sensitive and castration resistant sub-groups. Blood samples were analyzed for three different properties including our own CSV-based CTC enumeration (using 84-1 mAb against CSV), CellSearch-based epithelial CTC counts, and serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) quantification. Our data demonstrated that in comparison with CellSearch, the CSV-based method had greater sensitivity and specificity. Further, we observed significantly greater numbers of CTCs in castration resistant patients as measured by our CSV method but not CellSearch. Our data suggests CSV-guided CTC enumeration may hold prognostic value and should be further validated as a possible measurement of PCA progression towards the deadly, androgen-independent form.Entities:
Keywords: castration resistance; circulating tumor cells; epithelial mesenchymal transition; prostate cancer; vimentin
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28521303 PMCID: PMC5564771 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.17632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Detection of CSV-CTCs from patients with metastatic prostate cancer
(A) Immunological assessment of CSV expression in CSV-expressing LNCaP, PC3M (cell staining shown adjacently), and CSV-nul T47D and HCN1A cell lines using flow cytometry. CSV was detected by 84-1 antibody (red line). Isotype control was used as negative control (black line). (B, C) Spiked Calcein AM stained LNCaP cells were isolated using CSV method and analyzed under fluorescent microscope, Scale bar, 10 μm (B) and confocal microscope (C). (D) CTC isolated from patient blood was stained for androgen receptor (AR) and CSV using 84–1. Scale bar, 10 μm. (E) CTCs stained with CSV and various markers as indicated. All experiments were done in triplicates.
Characteristics of the patient population
| Patients | Hormone Sensitive | Castration Resistant |
|---|---|---|
| 10 (20.83%) | 38 (79.17%) | |
| Gleason 6–7 (3 + 4) | 3 (30.00%) | 3 (7.89%) |
| Gleason 7 (4 + 3)–9 | 6 (60.00%) | 26 (68.42%) |
| 84-1 CTC Positive | 6 | 31 |
| CellSearch CTC Positive | 5 | 24 |
| Bone | 8 | 35 |
| Lymph nodes | 5 | 20 |
| Liver | 2 | 4 |
| Lung | 1 | 2 |
| Mean | 69.1 | 65.92 |
| Median | 69.5 | 67 |
| Range | 62–76 | 49–83 |
| Mean | 20.5 | 128.46 |
| Median | 9.15 | 24.25 |
| Range | 0.1–97.3 | 0.6–1442.2 |
Figure 2Quantification of CTCs from 48 patients with metastatic prostate cancer using the CSV and CellSearch method
Two blood samples from each patient were obtained and analyzed using both the methods. Patients were classified as having progressive or stable disease based on clinical evaluations. CTC counts were plotted per 7.5 mL of blood. Dashed line indicates a threshold of 5CTCs/7.5 mL. (A) CTC enumeration in patients with responding/stable disease using both methods. (B) CTC enumeration in patients with non-responding/progressive disease using both methods. The data show that the CSV method is able to distinguish the progressive disease population with a higher sensitivity and specificity than that of the CellSearch method.
Diagnostic values of CTC count from both methods at selected CTC cutoff points
| Biomarker | Cutoff point | Sensitivity | Specificity | Likelihood ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CTC counts 84-1 method | > 1 | 100% | 61.1% | 2.571 |
| > 2 | 77.93% | 88.89% | 8.4 | |
| > 5 | 93.33% | 94.4% | 16.8 | |
Figure 3ROC curves for CTC counts using the CSV and CellSearch methods and serum PSA levels: ROC curves were determined to discriminate the patients with responding/stable disease from the patients with non-responding/progressive metastatic prostate cancer
An AUC-ROC value of closer to 1 denotes a perfect method for discrimination.
Figure 4CSV CTC counts and PSA levels independently associate with castration resistance: Both CSV CTC counts (A) and PSA levels (C) but not CellSearch (B) are independent, and unrelated biomarkers of castration resistance in peripheral blood samples. Generalized poisson mixed regression was applied for CTC counts resulting in a P < 0.001 for (A) and P = 0.852 for (B). For PSA score, generalized log-normal mixed regression was applied which showed a similar P < 0.001 (C). CSV CTC count was significantly correlated to CellSearch CTC count (P = 0.003) using Spearman's rank correlation due to the non-normality of the data (D). Patient numbers for hormone sensitive and castration resistant groups are n = 10 and 38, respectively. PSA change (E) from time of liquid biopsy acquisition and 6 months afterwards did not show a significant difference between the two groups. Calculation of a CTC index as determined by the division of a patients CSV CTC count by the combined count of CSV and CellSearch did not yield a statistically significant difference (F).