| Literature DB >> 31092882 |
Heather Scharpenseel1, Annkathrin Hanssen1, Sonja Loges2, Malte Mohme3, Christian Bernreuther4, Sven Peine5, Katrin Lamszus3, Yvonne Goy6, Cordula Petersen6, Manfred Westphal3, Markus Glatzel4, Sabine Riethdorf1, Klaus Pantel1, Harriet Wikman7.
Abstract
Although clinically relevant, the detection rates of EpCAM positive CTCs in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are surprisingly low. To find new clinically informative markers for CTC detection in NSCLC, the expression of EGFR and HER3 was first analyzed in NSCLC tissue (n = 148). A positive EGFR and HER3 staining was observed in 52.3% and 82.7% of the primary tumors, and in 62.7% and 91.2% of brain metastases, respectively. Only 3.0% of the brain metastases samples were negative for both HER3 and EGFR proteins, indicating that the majority of metastases express these ERBB proteins, which were therefore chosen for CTC enrichment using magnetic cell-separation. Enrichment based on either EGFR or HER3 detected CTCs in 37.8% of the patients, while the combination of EGFR/HER3 enrichment with the EpCAM-based CellSearch technique detected a significantly higher number of 66.7% CTC-positive patients (Cohen's kappa = -0.280) which underlines the existence of different CTC subpopulations in NSCLC. The malignant origin of keratin-positive/CD45-negative CTC clusters and single CTCs detected after EGFR/HER3 based enrichment was documented by the detection of NSCLC-associated mutations. In conclusion, EGFR and HER3 expression in metastasized NSCLC patients have considerable value for CTC isolation plus multiple markers can provide a novel liquid biopsy approach.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31092882 PMCID: PMC6520391 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-43678-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Clinical characteristics of NSCLC patients from the MACS cohort. n.a.: data not available.
|
| % | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| AC | 41 | 91.1 |
| SCC | 3 | 6.7 | |
| other | 1 | 2.2 | |
|
| Female | 20 | 44.4 |
| Male | 25 | 55.6 | |
|
| Mean (range) | 63 (41–85) | |
|
| III | 5 | 11.1 |
| IV | 40 | 88.9 | |
|
| Oligo-met. | 14 | 31.1 |
| Multiple met. | 27 | 60.0 | |
| M0 | 4 | 8.89 | |
|
| EGFR mut. | 7 | 15.6 |
| Wild type | 30 | 66.7 | |
| n.a. | 8 | 17.8 | |
Figure 1Protein expression and frequency distribution in primary and metastatic lung cancer tissue. EGFR protein immunohistochemistry (A) and HER3 protein immunohistochemistry (B) was performed on tissue microarray from primary NSCLC tumors and brain metastases. Representative strong (left), intermediate (center) and negative (right) staining are shown in 200x magnification (Zeiss Axiovision).
Figure 2EGFR (A) and HER3 (B) expression distribution in primary lung, lymph node and brain metastatic tissue and association between HER3 protein expression in primary and clinicopathological parameters (C). HER3 is more frequently expressed in brain metastasis of oligo-brain metastatic patients (p = 0.028) compared to patients with other metastatic sites. HER3 expression in primary NSCLC tumors is significantly associated with a decreased time to metastatic progression (p = 0.006; log-rank test) (D) and decreased relapse-free survival time (p = 0.013; log-rank test) (E).
Figure 3CTC positivity rates in NSCLC patients (n = 45). (A) Significantly higher detection rates when combining the methods in comparison to either single use CellSearch (p = 0.0023) or magnetic cell separation with EGFR/HER3 (p = 0.0109). (B) CTC enumeration detected by CellSearch and MACS.
Figure 4Representative images of two Circulating Tumor Cell cluster (DAPI+/CD45−/CK+) isolated via magnetic cell separation with HER3-protein antibody in one NSCLC patient. Heterogeneous MET expression was found within the cluster as well as CD45-positive leukocytes.
Figure 5Molecular analysis of primary lung tumor tissue (PT), corresponding circulating tumor cell cluster and three single CTCs. MassARRAY system (iPLEx Lung) shows heterozygous mutation for KRAS G12S in PT. (A) Same mutation is seen in the CTC cluster (B) and in one single CTC (C), whereas two single CTCs (D,E) show no mutation for KRAS.