| Literature DB >> 28789337 |
Weiwei Liu1, Binbin Yin1, Xuchu Wang1, Pan Yu1, Xiuzhi Duan1, Chunhua Liu1, Ben Wang1, Zhihua Tao1.
Abstract
The primary cause of tumor-associated mortality in prostate cancer (PCa) remains distant metastasis. The dissemination of tumor cells from the primary tumor to distant sites through the bloodstream cannot be detected early by standard imaging methods. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) represent an effective prognostic and predictive biomarker, which are able to monitor efficacy of adjuvant therapies, detect early development of metastases, and finally, assess therapeutic responses of advanced disease earlier than traditional diagnostic methods. In addition, since repeated tissue biopsies are invasive, costly and not always feasible, the assessment of tumor characteristics on CTCs, by a peripheral blood sample as a liquid biopsy, represents an attractive opportunity. The implementation of molecular and genomic characterization of CTCs may contribute to improve the treatment selection and thus, to move toward more precise diagnosis and therapy in PCa. The present study summarizes the current advances in CTC enrichment and detection strategies and reviews how CTCs may contribute to significant insights in the metastatic process, as well as how they may be utilized in clinical application in PCa. Although it is proposed that CTCs may offer insights into the prognosis and management of PCa, there are a number of challenges in the study of circulating tumor cells, and their clinical utility remains under investigation.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cell; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; liquid biopsy; metastasis; predictive; prognostic; prostate cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28789337 PMCID: PMC5529747 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2017.6332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Advantages and disadvantages of CTC enrichment approach.
| Technology and rationale | Advantages | Disadvantages | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Isolation by size | Easy and rapid; enrichment of CTCs from a wide range of tumors; feasible for EpCAM-negative CTCs | Loss of smaller CTCs or clotting of filter pores by leukocytes | ( |
| Density gradient centrifugation | Operability; feasible for EpCAM-negative CTCs | Loss of some CTCs | ( |
| Immunoselection | Visual confirmation of CTCs and quantitative | Costly and absence of standardized methods and reagents | ( |
| Microfluidics device | Dependent or independent of tumor membrane epitopes; high recovery and efficiency; potential to recover CTCs for additional characterization | High technical requirement; absence of standardized methods; early in development | ( |
CTCs, circulating tumor cells; EpCAM, epithelial cell adhesion molecule.
Specific mRNA markers for detection of prostate cancer circulating tumor cells.
| mRNA markers | (Refs.) |
|---|---|
| PSA | ( |
| PSMA | ( |
| PCA3 | ( |
| PSCA | ( |
| AR | ( |
| AR-V7 | ( |
| TMPRSS2-ERG | ( |
| KLK2 | ( |
| KLK3 | ( |
PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSMA, prostate-specific membrane antigen; PCA3, prostate cancer antigen 3; AR, androgen receptor; AR-V7, androgen receptor splice variant 7; TMPRSS2-ERG, transmembrane protease serine 2 and ETS-related fusion gene; KLK, kallikrein-related peptidase.
molecular profiling in prostate cancer circulating tumor cells as potential predictive value of tumor sensitivity to therapeutic modalities.
| Therapeutic modalities | Molecular profiling | Predictive value | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radical prostatectomy | PSA (−) | Biochemical recurrence (−) | ( |
| PSMA (−) | Biochemical recurrence (−) | ( | |
| Docetaxel | PCA3 (−) | Sensitivity | ( |
| TMPRSS2-ERG (−) | Sensitivity | ( | |
| KLK3 (−) | Sensitivity | ( | |
| Abiraterone acetate | AR (+) | Resistance | ( |
| MYC (+) | Resistance | ( | |
| Ki67 (+) | Resistance | ( | |
| AR nuclear translocation (+) | Resistance | ( | |
| AR-V7-positive | Resistance | ( | |
| Enzalutamide | AR-V7-positive | Resistance | ( |
| Taxanes | AR-V7-positive | Sensitivity | ( |
| Cabazitaxel | AR-V7-positive | Sensitivity | ( |
| ADT | Harboring AR mutation | Resistance | ( |
| Wnt5a (+) | Resistance | ( |
(−), decreased; (+), increased; ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PSMA, prostate-specific membrane antigen; PCA3, prostate cancer antigen 3; TMPRSS2-ERG, transmembrane protease serine 2 and ETS-related fusion gene; KLK, kallikrein-related peptidase; AR, androgen receptor; AR-V7, androgen receptor splice variant 7.
Figure 1.Circulating tumor cell in prostate cancer: Precision diagnosis and therapy.