| Literature DB >> 29467551 |
Daniel Brungs1, David Lynch2, Alison Ws Luk2, Elahe Minaei1, Marie Ranson1, Morteza Aghmesheh1, Kara L Vine1, Martin Carolan1, Mouhannad Jaber3, Paul de Souza2, Therese M Becker2.
Abstract
AIM: To demonstrate the feasibility of cryopreservation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) for prognostic circulating tumor cell (CTC) detection in gastroesophageal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Circulating tumor cells; Cryopreservation; Gastric cancer; Gastroesophageal cancer; Liquid biopsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29467551 PMCID: PMC5807939 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v24.i7.810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1Representative images of circulating tumor cell isolation from fresh and cryopreserved samples demonstrating preservation of leukocyte and circulating tumor cell morphology. The fresh sample demonstrates a nucleated CK+/CD45- CTC which is uPAR negative, as well as a CK-/CD45+ leukocyte. The cryopreserved sample shows a uPAR positive CTC. CTC: Circulating tumor cell.
Figure 2Circulating tumor cell enumeration by processing method. Mean number of CTCs isolated in the fresh specimens were higher than in the matched cryopreserved sample (mean difference in CTCs 17.1 95%CI: 0.7-33.6, P = 0.043). This difference was mostly driven by larger falls in CTC counts in samples with high numbers of CTCs (> 50 CTCs in fresh samples), with no significant difference in CTC counts for samples with less than 50 CTC in the fresh specimen (P = 0.06).
Characteristics of patients in cohort 2 n (%)
| Age | |||
| Mean (range) | 64 (39-89) | 65 (39-89) | 64 (48-83) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 32 (74.4) | 15 (65.2) | 20 (85.0) |
| Female | 11 (25.6) | 8 (34.8) | 3 (15.0) |
| ECOG | |||
| 0-1 | 36 (83.7) | 22 (95.6) | 14 (70.0) |
| 2-4 | 7 (16.3) | 1 (4.3) | 6 (30.0) |
| Primary tumor location | |||
| Distal oesophageal | 12 (27.9) | 8 (34.8) | 4 (20.0) |
| Gastroesophageal junction | 14 (32.6) | 4 (17.4) | 10 (50.0) |
| Gastric | 17 (37.5) | 11 (47.8) | 6 (30.0) |
| Stage | |||
| II | 18 (41.9) | 13 (56.5) | 5 (25.0) |
| III | 6 (14.0) | 4 (17.4) | 2 (10.0) |
| IV | 19 (44.2) | 6 (26.1) | 13 (65.0) |
CTC: Circulating tumor cell; ECOG: Eastern cooperative oncology group performance status.
Figure 3Circulating tumor cell count by stage. CTC processing post cryopreservation produced a higher mean CTC count in metastatic patients compared to the resectable patients (mean CTC in metastatic 53.8 vs resectable 15.8, P = 0.0013). CTC: Circulating tumor cell.
Figure 4Overall survival by circulating tumor cell count. Patients with > 17 CTCs isolated from cryopreserved specimens had a poorer overall survival compared to those with ≤ 17 CTCs (median OS 2.8 mo vs 23.2 mo, HR = 4.4, 95%CI: 1.7-11.7, P = 0.0013). OS: Overall survival; CTC: Circulating tumor cell.
Univariate and multivariate analysis for overall survival for cohort 2 (n = 43)
| CTC count (high | 4.4 (1.7-11.7) | 0.001 | 3.7 (1.2-12.4) | 0.03 |
| Age (≥ 65 | 0.7 (0.3-1.8) | 0.46 | 1.0 (0.9-1.1) | 0.76 |
| ECOG (2-4 | 7.2 (2.2-23.7) | 0.0002 | 2.3 (0.5-10.1) | 0.14 |
| Sex (male | 1.2 (0.4-3.8) | 0.7 | 0.7 (0.2-2.1) | 0.49 |
| Stage (IV | 10.0 (3.3-30.8) | < 0.0001 | 9.9 (2.9-33.8) | 0.0003 |
| Primary tumor location (gastric | 0.3 (0.1-1.01) | 0.05 | 0.4 (0.2-1.6) | 0.22 |
Significant values are italicised. In both univariate and multivariate analysis, a high CTC count (> 17) remained statistically significant as an independent factor associated with poorer overall survival. CTC: Circulating tumor cell; ECOG: Eastern cooperative oncology group performance status; GOJ: Gastroesophageal junction.