| Literature DB >> 29108279 |
Masanori Hayashi1, Peixuan Zhu2, Gregory McCarty1, Christian F Meyer1, Christine A Pratilas1, Adam Levin3, Carol D Morris3, Catherine M Albert1,4, Kyle W Jackson1, Cha-Mei Tang2, David M Loeb1.
Abstract
Metastatic disease is the most important factor in determining the survival of sarcoma patients. Since sarcoma metastasis is predominantly hematogenous, we hypothesized that detection and quantification of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) could reflect response to therapy and risk of metastatic relapse. We evaluated the presence of CTCs using a novel animal model and in the blood of patients with high grade sarcomas utilizing the CellSieve™ size-based low pressure microfiltration system. Sarcoma CTCs were identified based on antibody staining patterns and nuclear morphology. Additionally, RNA was extracted from the CTCs for molecular analysis including demonstration of an EWS-FLI1 translocation, identification of a previously unrecognized p53 mutation in a patient with Ewing sarcoma, and single cell RNA sequencing of CTC from a child with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. In mouse xenograft models, the presence of CTC correlates with disease burden and with clinically silent metastases. In human patients, CTCs were readily detected at diagnosis, decreased with successful treatment, and were detectable in the blood of patients with no radiographic evidence of disease prior to the development of overt metastasis. Although evaluation of CTC is established in the care of patients with carcinomas, this technology has yet to be effectively applied to the evaluation and treatment of sarcoma patients. Our work demonstrates that the CellSieve™ microfiltration system can be used to study the biology of CTC in both mouse models and human sarcoma patients, with the potential for application to the monitoring of disease response and prediction of metastatic relapse.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; biomarker; circulating; neoplastic cells; xenograft
Year: 2017 PMID: 29108279 PMCID: PMC5668012 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Validation of methodology
(A) Blood from healthy volunteers was filtered (control) or was spiked with approximately 100 cells from the indicated cell line and then filtered. Membranes were stained as described and the number of TdTomato-positive, CD45-negative, vimentin-positive cells was quantified on each membrane. (B) Representative low power (10x) image of filtered normal blood. (C) Representative low power (10x) image of blood spiked with TdTomato-labeled TC71 cells (yellow arrow).
Figure 2CTC in animal models
(A) Schematic of experimental design. Major events (tumor implantation, hindlimb amputation, and euthanasia) are indicated with black arrows. Time points of blood draws are indicated with red arrows. (B) Growth curve of TC71 xenograft implanted in the pretibial space of NSG mice. Legs were amputated on Day 28, and mice were euthanized on either Day 35 or Day 56. Inset shows IVIS imaging to confirm retention of tdTomato in the growing tumor. (C) Numbers of CTC and CTC clusters recovered from each mouse. Note that the mouse with red symbols was found to have no evidence of disease on necropsy. (D) Representative image of a cluster of CTC recovered from one of the mice. Endogenous tdTomato is red, nuclei stained with DAPI are blue, and vimentin is green. (E) Quantification of CTC isolated from NSG mice bearing a TC32 xenograft. Mice were euthanized either at the time of amputation (“Pre-op”), on Day 9 after amputation (“POD 9”), or on Day 30 after amputation (“Euthanasia”), when subclinical metastases were expected to be present. Horizontal line represents the median value. Statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney test given deviation of the data from a normal distribution.
CTC detection from all samples
| Pt # | Age | Dx | CTC | Clusters | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | 38 | ES | 3 | 10 | Refractory localized tumor |
| 1b | 1 | 1 | Post-operative, radiographic NED | ||
| 2 | 27 | OS | 0 | 44 | Bilateral pulmonary metastases |
| 3a | 14 | ES | 11 | 16 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 3b | 0 | 0 | After neoadjuvant chemotherapy | ||
| 3c | 0 | 0 | After resection of residual tumor, radiographic NED | ||
| 3d | 0 | 0 | End of therapy, radiographic NED | ||
| 4 | 45 | DDLS | 2 | 0 | Recurrent retroperitoneal tumor |
| 5 | 5 | ES | 0 | 0 | End of therapy, radiographic NED |
| 6a | 9 | ARMS | 2 | 0 | Newly diagnosed metastatic relapse |
| 6b | 0 | 0 | End of therapy for relapsed disease, residual mass present | ||
| 7 | 48 | Poorly diff myxoid liposarcoma | 2 | 1 | Widely metastatic refractory disease |
| 8 | 28 | SS | 0 | 0 | Metastatic disease, after neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
| 9a | 60 | ES | 0 | 1 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 9b | 0 | 0 | After neoadjuvant chemotherapy | ||
| 9c | 0 | 0 | After surgical resection, radiographic NED | ||
| 9d | 0 | 0 | End of therapy, radiographic NED | ||
| 10a | 21 | ES | 16 | 0 | Localized tumor, after neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
| 10b | 4 | 0 | After resection of residual tumor, radiographic NED | ||
| 10c | 1 | 0 | New metastasis | ||
| 10d | 1 | 0 | Another new metastasis | ||
| 11 | 23 | ES | 1 | 8 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 12a | 15 | OS | 2 | 0 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 12b | 0 | 0 | End of therapy, radiographic NED | ||
| 13 | 26 | Epithelioid sarcoma | 20 | 7 | Widely metastatic recurrent disease |
| 14a | 31 | SS | 12 | 3 | Localized tumor, after neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
| 14b | 1 | 0 | After surgical resection, radiographic NED. Relapsed 2 months later | ||
| 15 | 55 | SS | 0 | 0 | Localized tumor, after neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
| 16a | 21 | ES | 1 | 0 | Newly diagnosed metastatic disease |
| 16b | 0 | 0 | After neoadjuvant chemotherapy | ||
| 17 | 12 | Myxoid liposarcoma | 3 | 0 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 18 | 60 | Chondrosarcoma | 0 | 0 | Newly diagnosed metastatic disease |
| 19 | 58 | Leiomyosarcoma | 514 | 92 | After neoadjuvant chemotherapy for relapsed disease |
| 20a | 16 | OS | 21 | 0 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic relapse |
| 20b | 46 | 6 | Third metastatic relapse | ||
| 20c | 6 | 1 | After resection of metastatic disease | ||
| 21 | 12 | ES | 8 | 3 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 22 | 23 | OS | 0 | 0 | Localized tumor, after neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
| 23 | 11 | OS | 16 | 2 | Third metastatic relapse |
| 24 | 32 | SS | 0 | 0 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor, Day 2 of chemotherapy |
| 25 | 52 | SS | 242 | 82 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 26a | 14 | ES | 179 | 89 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 26b | 508 | 26 | After neoadjuvant chemotherapy | ||
| 26c | 0 | 0 | End of therapy, radiographic NED | ||
| 27 | 15 | OS | 0 | 0 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic recurrence |
| 28 | 53 | OS | 0 | 0 | After resection of localized tumor, radiographic NED |
| 29 | 29 | DSRCT | 0 | 0 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic disease |
| 30 | <1 | ERMS | 26 | 3 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic disease |
| 31 | 18 | SS | 6 | 1 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 32 | 64 | ARMS | 2 | 0 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic disease |
| 33 | 23 | MPNST | 248 | 38 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 34 | 2 | ARMS | 446 | 28 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
| 35 | 9 | ERMS | 272 | 14 | Newly diagnosed with metastatic disease |
| 36 | 18 | OS | 3 | 0 | Newly diagnosed localized tumor |
ES = Ewing sarcoma; OS = osteosarcoma; DDLS = dedifferentiated liposarcoma; ARMS = alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma; ERMS = embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma; SS = synovial sarcoma; DSRCT = desmoplastic small round cell tumor; NED = no evidence of disease.
Figure 3CTC from sarcoma patients
CTC isolated from the blood of (A and B) a 38 year old man with a primary refractory localized paraspinal Ewing sarcoma, (C) a 17 year old girl with recurrent osteosarcoma, (D) a 3 year old boy with newly diagnosed alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, (E) a 9 year old boy with metastatic embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, and (F) a 23 year old man with localized malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor. Vimentin is stained red, nuclei stained with DAPI are blue, and CD45 is stained purple. The smaller CD45+ lymphocytes (indicated by yellow arrows in panels A and B) are readily distinguished from larger CD45- sarcoma cells.
Figure 4CTC are detected at diagnosis and decrease in response to therapy
(A) CTC and CTC clusters were quantified from blood samples drawn from patients with the indicated diagnoses. ES = Ewing sarcoma, OS = osteosarcoma, Chondro = chondrosarcoma, SS = synovial sarcoma, DSRCT = desmoplastic small round cell tumor, MLS = myxoid liposarcoma, ERMS = embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, and ARMS = alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. (B) CTC and clusters were quantified from blood samples obtained from patients with the indicated diagnoses at a time when the patient had no radiographic evidence of disease. (C) CTC and CTC clusters were quantified from blood samples drawn from patients at various time points in their therapy. For graphing purposes, each cluster was considered to have 4 cells. Red lines and symbols represent patients who subsequently relapsed, and green lines and symbols represent patients who remain without radiographic evidence of disease.
Figure 5Molecular analysis of CTC from a Ewing sarcoma patient
(A) RNA was extracted from CTC isolated from the blood of a patient with localized Ewing sarcoma of the thigh and amplified with primers specific for the EWS-FLI1 translocation (Lane 2) or p53 (Lane 4). Lane 1 contains a molecular weight ladder, and lane 3 is empty. The p53 amplicon was TA cloned, and the sequence obtained from each clone is shown, aligned with the reference sequence (indicated by Ref:). The mutant nucleotide, G592A, is identified by the arrow. (B) Individual CTC were analyzed on the 10x Genomics platform, and resultant gene expression profiles were clustered by the Cell Ranger program. A t-SNE projection is presented. Group 3 (green dots), containing 41 cells, is the CTC population. Group 1 (orange dots) is a cluster of red blood cells, and Group 2 (blue dots) represents contaminating white blood cells. (C) Protein interaction network of the protein-coding genes among the 70 genes differentially and strongly expressed in the CTC population.