| Literature DB >> 31866766 |
Chang Yang1, Bai-Rong Xia1, Wei-Lin Jin2,3, Ge Lou1.
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are a rare subset of cells found in the blood of patients with solid tumors, which function as a seed for metastases. Cancer cells metastasize through the bloodstream either as single migratory CTCs or as multicellular groupings-CTC clusters. The CTCs preserve primary tumor heterogeneity and mimic tumor properties, and may be considered as clinical biomarker, preclinical model, and therapeutic target. The potential clinical application of CTCs is being a component of liquid biopsy. CTCs are also good candidates for generating preclinical models, especially 3D organoid cultures, which could be applied in drug screening, disease modeling, genome editing, tumor immunity, and organoid biobanks. In this review, we summarize current knowledge on the value and promise of evolving CTC technologies and highlight cutting-edge research on CTCs in liquid biopsy, tumor metastasis, and organoid preclinical models. The study of CTCs offers broad pathways to develop new biomarkers for tumor patient diagnosis, prognosis, and response to therapy, as well as translational models accelerating oncologic drug development.Entities:
Keywords: 3D organoid model; Circulating tumor cells; Liquid biopsy; Precision oncology; Tumor metastasis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31866766 PMCID: PMC6918690 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-019-1067-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Fig. 1Basic introduction of the liquid biopsy approaches and applications of CTCs as liquid biopsy. a Liquid biopsy approaches involve peripheral blood, precardial effusion, stool, urine, ascites, pleural effusion, saliva and cerebrospinal fluid. Moreover, peripheral blood biopsy include isolation of circulating tumor cells(CTCs), circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating tumor RNA(ctRNA) and exosomes. b Applications of CTCs as liquid biopsy in early diagnosis, prognosis prediction, and disease monitoring, molecular phenotyping, therapy response evaluation
Fig. 2Milestones of CTCs development history
CTCs isolation, enrichment, and identification technologies
| Category | Strategy | Technology/device | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biological properties | Surface marker detection | Ferrofluids coated to EpCAM/CellSearch® | [ |
| Magnetic beads coated to EpCAM + MUC1/AdnaTest® | [ | ||
| EpCAM-coated wire for in vivo isolation/CellCollector™ | [ | ||
| CD45+ depletion | [ | ||
| Surface marker detection combined microfluid | Microposts or channels coated to EpCAM/CTC-Chip/HB-Chip | [ | |
| FICOLL and EpCAM-based microfluidic device/Isoflux® | [ | ||
| Glycan-affinity microfluidic devices | [ | ||
| Physical properties | Size-based enrichment | ISET® | [ |
| Density-based | OncoQuick® | [ | |
| Centrifugal force-based | cascaded microfluidic device | [ | |
| Acoustophoresis-based | Acoustofluidic | [ | |
| Nanorough polystyrene substrates adherence-based | Nanostructured polystyrene well plates | [ | |
| Deformability-based | JETTATM | [ | |
| Optofluidic-based | Optofluidic real-time cell sorter | [ | |
| Dielectric-based | DEP | [ | |
| DEP-LFFF | [ | ||
| DEP Array | [ | ||
| Functional assays | Invasive capacity | VitaAssay™ | [ |
| Protein release during culture | EPISPOT assay | [ | |
| Telomerase expression | TelomeScan® | [ |
Fig. 3Basic introdction of CTCs-derived organoid in precision medcine
Summary of studies on CTCs in precision medicine
| Category | Proposed functions | Representative genes | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oncogene validation | Epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) | TGFβ1, SNAIL1 | [ |
| Metastasis | FABP, CEACAM5 | [ | |
| Stem cell phenotype | CD24, CD44, CD133, ALDH1 | [ | |
| Cell proliferation | RRM1, MAPK14 | [ | |
| Targeted therapy | Changing biomarker | HER2, EGFR | [ |
| Signaling pathway | AKT1, AKT2, PIK3R1, PTEN | [ | |
| Drug screening | Biomarkers of therapeutic resistance | RAS, BRAF (colorectal cancer) | [ |
| AR (prostate cancer) | [ | ||
| Biomarkers of drug sensitivity | ER (endocrine therapy) | [ | |
| ERCC1 (chemotherapy) | [ | ||
| PD1 (immune therapy) | [ |
Fig. 4a Basic metastases process of CTCs and CTCs clusters. b CTC clusters seeding in blood. c Individual CTCs aggregation in blood