| Literature DB >> 31053984 |
Tania Mamdouhi1, Julianne D Twomey1, K Melodi McSweeney1, Baolin Zhang2.
Abstract
The presence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the bloodstream signals the existence of a tumor and denotes risk of metastatic spread. CTCs can be isolated and analyzed to monitor cancer progression and therapeutic response. However, CTC isolation devices have shown considerable variation in detection rates, limiting their use as a routine diagnostic and monitoring tool. In this review, we discuss recent advances in CTC detection methodologies and associated clinical studies. We provide perspective on the future direction of CTC isolation and molecular characterization towards developing reliable biomarkers that monitor disease progression or therapeutic response.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Circulating tumor cells; Liquid biopsy; Metastasis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31053984 PMCID: PMC6647404 DOI: 10.1007/s10555-019-09795-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Metastasis Rev ISSN: 0167-7659 Impact factor: 9.264
Fig. 1Trends in CTC evaluation. Number of clinical studies using each type of CTC evaluation between 1999 and 2017. Data were obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov by searching the terms “circulating tumor cells” and “cancer”, revealing 493 clinical programs involving CTC evaluation. The use of CTCs in clinical trials has been increasing over the past 20 years. These trials include enumeration, characterization, or a combination. Molecular characterization (blue), which encompasses genetic and proteomic characterization of CTCs, shows a steady increase and signals a trend in cancer therapeutic development
Fig. 2Exploration of CTCs in common cancers. Number of clinical trials conducted between 1999 and 2017 evaluating CTCs in common primary cancer types (left axis, bar graph). Primary cancer types are labeled in ascending order based on the estimated number of deaths in 2018 in the U.S. [7](right axis, line graph). Red bars indicate tumors of non-epithelial origin. +Incidence not reported, excluded from SEER common cancer list
Fig. 3Proportion of clinical studies between 1999 and 2017 using specific isolation markers (top panel) and specific techniques for enrichment/analysis (bottom panel). Lab-technique was a classification used for clinical studies in which the disclosed device was unique/not commercially available. Abbreviations: epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), cluster of differentiation 146 (CD146), prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), cytokeratin 19 (CK19), isolation by size of tumor cells (ISET), reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), epithelial immunoSPOT assay (EPISPOT), fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)
Common CTC enrichment techniques used in the clinical setting categorized by methodology. Clinical studies referenced exemplify typical use but do not encompass all the trials using this device between 1999 and 2017
| Device | Feature for isolation | Technology | Comments | Clinical studies | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive enrichment | CellSearch (Veridex) | EpCAM | FDA approved, ferromagnetic beads labeled with EpCAM-antibodies, stained for CK+, CD45−, DAPI+ | No detection of EMT, single marker, expensive, no further downstream analysis | [ |
| GILUPI CellCollector | EpCAM | Invasive 30-min insertion, no detection of EMT, single marker, no further downstream analysis | NCT03071900, NCT02507778 | ||
| IsoFlux (Fluxion Biosciences) | EpCAM and optional additional markers | Antibody based magnetic separation by flow cytometry, additional markers available | Based on cell surface antigen presence, automated identification, incorporates Next Generation Sequencing | [ | |
| Herringbone CTC-Chip | EpCAM | Antibody micropost capture, microfluidic device | Increased interactions with antibody surface, based on cell surface antigen presence, single marker, no detection of EMT | [ | |
| MAC MicroBead Technology (Miltenyi) | EpCAM | Superparamagnetic nano-sized beads | No differentiation of low and high expression levels [ | [ | |
| BD FACScanto II | EpCAM and CKs | Flow-cytometry antibody fluorescent separation | No detection of EMT, based on cell surface antigen presence | [ | |
| GEDI | EpCAM | Microfluidic device with EpCAM-antibody labeled obstacles, stained for CD45−, DAPI+, Pdx-1+ | No detection of EMT, single marker, no further downstream analysis | [ | |
| EPISPOT | Many cell surface proteins | CD45 depletion followed by immunofluorescence using fluorochrome labeled secondary antibodies | Utilize CTC secreted proteins for enrichment, protein characterization possible | [ | |
| Negative enrichment | RosetteSep CTC Enrichment Cocktail/ CD45 Depletion Cocktail (STEMCELL) | Density | RBC lysis with or without CD45 depletion followed by density gradient to remove lymphocytes and other unwanted cells | Requires downstream analysis to confirm CTC status | NCT02349867 |
| ApoStream | Dielectric property | Dielectrophoresis field-flow that repels blood cells into eluent | Takes advantage of CTC phenotypic and dielectric properties | NCT02349867 | |
| MAC MicroBead Technology (Miltenyi) | CD45 | Superparamagnetic nano-sized beads deplete CD45+ leukocytes | No differentiation of low and high expression levels [ | ||
| Size-based | CellSieve (Creatv Microtech) | Size | Biocompatible polymer filter with 7-μm diameter pores | Loss of small diameter CTCs, high leukocyte retention | |
| ISET | Size | Polycarbon membrane with 8-μm diameter pores | Loss of small diameter CTCs, high leukocyte retention | [ NCT01776385 | |
| Viator Therapeutic Oncophoresis System | Size and deformability | Time-consuming, patient compliance with procedure, loss of small diameter CTCs | NCT01943500 | ||
| Parosotix System (ANGEL) | Size and deformability | Microfluidic device, separates cells when flowing through steps of the cassette | NCT02490800, NCT03427450, NCT02785731 | ||
| CanPatrol (SurExam) | Size | RBC lysis followed by filtration in an 8-μm diameter porous membrane | Loss of small diameter CTCs, high leukocyte retention | [ NCT02951897 | |
| ScreenCell Cyto Filtration | Size | 8-μm diameter porous membrane | [ | ||
| Density-based | Ficoll-Paque | Density | Reagent separates peripheral blood mononuclear cells for downstream analysis of CTCs | Requires downstream analysis to confirm CTC status | [ |
*CK, cytokeratin; DAPI, 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole