| Literature DB >> 31226786 |
Kartik Anand1, Jason Roszik2, Dan Gombos3, Joshua Upshaw4, Vanessa Sarli5, Salyna Meas6, Anthony Lucci7, Carolyn Hall8, Sapna Patel9.
Abstract
Nearly 50% of uveal melanoma (UM) patients develop metastatic disease, and there remains no current standard assay for detection of minimal residual disease. We conducted a pilot study to check the feasibility of circulating tumor cell (CTC) detection in UM. We enrolled 40 patients with early or metastatic UM of which 20 patients had early-stage disease, 19 had metastatic disease, and one was not evaluable. At initial blood draw, 36% of patients had detectable CTCs (30% in early-stage vs. 42% in metastatic), which increased to 54% at data cutoff (40% in early-stage vs. 68% in metastatic). Five early-stage patients developed distant metastases, 60% (3/5) had detectable CTCs before radiographic detection of the metastasis. Landmark overall survival (from study enrollment) at 24 months was statistically lower in CTC-positive vs. negative early-stage UM (p < 0.05). Within this small dataset, the presence of CTCs in early-stage UM predicted an increased risk of metastatic disease and was associated with worse outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cells; liquid biopsy; pilot study; uveal melanoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31226786 PMCID: PMC6628316 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11060856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Patient characteristics
| Total Patients ( | |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Male ( | 17 (44%) |
| Female ( | 22 (56%) |
| Median age | 52 years (20–83 years) |
| Race | |
| Non-Hispanic White ( | 39 (100%) |
| Disease status at study enrollment | |
| Early-stage disease ( | 20 (51%) |
| Class 1 ( | 2 |
| Class 2 ( | 13 |
| Unknown ( | 5 |
| Metastatic ( | 19 (49%) |
| Mutation analysis ( | 19 |
| GNAQ ( | 12 (63%) |
| GNA11 ( | 5 (27%) |
| Wildtype ( | 1 (5%) |
| Other ( | 1 (5%) |
| Median time between diagnosis and blood sampling | 20.35 months |
| Early-stage | 20.10 months |
| Metastatic | 24.65 months |
| Total Study follow up | 16.40 months |
| Early-stage | 16.84 months |
| Metastatic | 14.56 months |
Circulating tumor cells at initial draw
| Early-Stage Uveal Melanoma ( | 20 |
|---|---|
| | 14 (70%) |
| | 14 (70%) |
| 1 CTC | 3 |
| Class 1 | 1 |
| Class 2 | 2 |
| Unknown | 0 |
| 2 CTCs | 1 |
| Class 1 | 0 |
| Class 2 | 0 |
| Unknown | 1 |
| 3 CTCs | 2 |
| Class 1 | 0 |
| Class 2 | 1 |
| Unknown | 1 |
|
|
|
| | 11 (58%) |
| | 8 (42%) |
| 1 CTC | 3 |
| 2 CTCs | 2 |
| 5 CTCs | 1 |
| 22 CTCs | 1 |
| 38 CTCs | 1 |
Figure 1Mean burden of CTC in early-stage, 1.83 CTCs (standard deviation: 0.98), vs. metastatic uveal melanoma 9 CTCs (standard deviation: 13.7). p > 0.05.
Characteristics of patients who developed metastasis in early-stage uveal melanoma
| Patient | Class by Gene Expression | Mutational Analysis | Date of Diagnosis | Date of CTC Detection | Date of Metastasis by Imaging | Vital Status at Study Cutoff |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 001 | Class 2 | GNA11 | 12/15/2012 | 12/3/2014 | 11/20/2017 | Alive |
| Patient 003 | Class 2 |
| 9/15/2014 | CTC never detected | 7/14/2015 | Alive |
| Patient 012 | Class 2 |
| 1/15/2015 | 10/19/2015 | 8/2/2016 | Deceased |
| Patient 018 | Unknown * | wild-type | 10/19/2015 | 4/27/2016 | 1/31/2017 | Deceased |
| Patient 029 | Class 2 | not tested | 10/20/2016 | CTC never detected | 11/22/2017 | Alive |
* monosomy 3. Data: month/day/year.
Figure 2Three out of five patients who developed distant metastasis had CTCs detected before radiographic detection of metastasis. Patients 001, 012, and 018 had CTCs detected 24.9, 9.5 and 3.2 months prior to radiographic evidence of metastasis, respectively. Patient 003 and 029 were “non-secretors” for CTCs as they had no CTC detected pre and post metastasis detection by radiographic imaging.
Figure 3Landmark overall survival at 24 months was poor in CTC detected vs. CTC not-detected early-stage uveal melanoma (p < 0.05).