| Literature DB >> 29416803 |
Xuelu Li1,2, Yuan Zhang1,3, Jinlei Ding1,4, Min Wang1,3, Na Li1,5, Hui Yang1,5, Kainan Wang1,5, Dandan Wang6, Peter Ping Lin6, Man Li1,5, Zuowei Zhao1,2, Pixu Liu1,3,7.
Abstract
Despite marked advances in breast cancer therapy, breast cancer-associated leptomeningeal metastasis (LM), a particularly aggressive syndrome with multifocal seeding of the leptomeninges by tumor cells, still carries an abysmal prognosis. A major problem with breast cancer LM surveillance is the lack of an effective and sensitive means to track dynamic changes of the disease. Cytology detection of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is considered the gold standard for LM diagnosis but has a high false-negative rate with a limited sensitivity. Here we applied subtraction enrichment and immunostaining-fluorescence in situ (SE-i•FISH) method, a technique previously used for isolating circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from the peripheral blood, to detect, enumerate, and track cerebrospinal fluid-derived tumor cells (CSFTCs) in CSF samples from 8 breast cancer patients. Comparing with cytology test, we found SE-i•FISH method can accurately and feasibly detect CSFTCs for the diagnosis of breast cancer-associated LM and monitor the disease progression. We also isolated and cultured CSFTCs from these cancer patients and performed genomic sequencing on CSFTCs of two patients. Genomic analysis of CSFTCs against corresponding archival primary breast tumors revealed clonal relationships with some ongoing evolution. Further drug sensitivity test on cultured CSFTCs based on genomic analysis data helped identify promising treatment options for the patient tested. Together, our results suggest that CSFTCs detection using SE-i•FISH platform could serve as a sensitive and accurate method to make the diagnosis and a promising approach to monitor tumor dynamics and treatment response for breast cancer-associated LM.Entities:
Keywords: SE-i•FISH; breast cancer; cerebrospinal fluid-derived tumor cell; leptomeningeal metastasis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29416803 PMCID: PMC5788671 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.23597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Summary of breast cancer patients with leptomeningel metastases
| No. | Age | Molecular classification of PMT | Age | Survival Time | CSFTC count per 1 ml | Time from single cell to cluster | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ki67 | |||||||||
| NM01 | 27 | - | - | - | 30% | 28 | 9 months | 195 | 21 days |
| NM02 | 34 | - | - | - | 50% | 43 | 1 year | - | No cluster |
| NM03 | 40 | 50% | - | - | 30% | 47 | 20 days | 67 | No cluster |
| NM04 | 46 | - | - | - | 80% | 48 | 6 months | 328 | 12 days |
| NM05 | 33 | - | - | - | 50% | 39 | 8 months | - | No cluster |
| NM06 | 43 | - | - | - | 40% | 49 | 11 months | 122 | No cluster |
| NM07 | 51 | <1% | <1% | - | 40% | 51 | 1 year | 218 | 10 days |
| NM08 | 32 | 70% | 50% | - | 20% | 35 | 13 months | - | No cluster |
Note: PMT, primary tumor. LM, leptomeningel metastasis. ‘-’, the data is not available.
Figure 1Overview of SE-i•FISH platform for dynamic monitoring and ex vivo culture of CSFTCs
(A) The treatment timelines received by the patient (NM04). (i) From 2015 until 2016, the patient received four cycles of adjuvant T+Bev (Paclitaxel/Bevacizumab) and three cycles of TP (Paclitaxel/DDP) chemotherapy. In January 2016, the patient presented with hematuresis. Following urethrocystoscopy biopsy, the patient received three cycles of NVB+X (Vinorelbine/Capecitabine). The treatment had to stop as she presented with excruciating headache and vomiting. On the basis of the diagnosis of leptomeningeal metastases by MRI and CSF cytology, the patient received regularly intrathecal methotrexate and cytarabine. Green arrows mean intrathecal chemotherapies. The immunofluorescent staining for cytokeratin (CK, green), chromosome 8 (Yellow), CD45 (Red), and nuclei (DAPI, blue). (ii) Representative images of MRI and CSF cytology. (Upper right panel) Light microscopic imaging with Papanicolaou staining. (iii) The number of CSFTCs and the intracranial pressure are shown in the right panel. (B) Ex vivo culture of CSFTCs. 5–10 ml CSF were obtained from patients and then enriched. CSFTCs were cultured in a medium without serum under suspension culture conditions. The CSFTCs of NM04 and NM07 could be expanded in short term as indicated. Scale bar, 50 μm. (C) At Day 18, the tumor clusters of case NM04 were randomly picked. The exome sequencing was performed on DNA extracted from CSFTCs and the paired primary tumor. The distribution of somatic mutations detected by exome sequencing is presented in a heat map.
Figure 2Treatment timelines and longitudinal monitoring of CSFTCs
(A, B) The treatment timelines received by the patient (NM01). From 2014 until 2015, the patient received six cycles of postoperative adjuvant TAC (Taxotere/Doxorubicin/Cyclophosphamide) chemotherapy, radiotherapy and three cycles of Gem+DDP (Gemcitabine/Cisplatin). In August 2015, brain metastases were detected and the patient underwent SBRT (Stereotactic body radiotherapy). Three cycles of NVB+S-1 (Vinorelbine/Tegafur) were given to the patient and the treatment had to stop as she presented with excruciating headache and vomiting. Leptomeningeal metastases were diagnosed by CSF cytology using Papanicolaou staining (C). In 2016, she received regularly intrathecal chemotherapy (Methotrexate/Cytarabine). Representative images of CSFTCs and CTCs are also shown. Green arrows mean intrathecal chemotherapies. Red arrows mean that we simultaneously monitored CTCs in blood. The immunofluorescent staining for cytokeratin (CK, green), chromosome 8 (Yellow), CD45 (Red), and nuclei (DAPI, blue). (C) Initial MRI examination did not show leptomeningeal metastases (left), whereas it appeared after 4 months. The yellow arrowheads are pointing to the leptomeningeal metastases (right). Dynamic changes of intracranial pressures (purple), CSFTC (blue) and CTC (yellow) counts as indicated in (D).
Figure 4Drug sensitivity on CSFTCs as a potential predictive tool for treatment response
(A) The distribution of somatic mutations detected by exome sequencing was presented in a heat map. (B) Heatmaps represent cell viability after treatment of selected anticancer drugs. Each concentration represents a 2-fold increase from the previous dose, with each concentration tested in triplicate.
Figure 3Ex vivo expansion of CSFTCs from case NM01
The left panel showed representative images of ex vivo culture of CSFTCs. The CSFTCs could be expanded for more than seven weeks, but after 90 days they gradually underwent senescence. (A) The number of CTCs in blood and CSFTCs were recorded by the SE-i•FISH platform. (B) Cerebrospinal fluid was collected and centrifuged. Subsequently, CSFTCs were enriched by subtraction enrichment (SE) technology. (C) At Day 21, cultures appeared tumor clusters, and then two tumor clusters were picked for single-cell genomic amplification and exome sequencing. (D) Ex vivo drug sensitivity test was assessed by CCK8 assay. (E) The morphological changes of CSFTCs were observed, when the special non-serum medium was switched to the medium with 10% FBS. At Day 65, we observed the small size cells. Representative images of immunofluorescence (up) and scanning electron microscope (down) are shown in (F).