| Literature DB >> 32183503 |
Phung Thanh Huong1, Sanjeev Gurshaney2, Nguyen Thanh Binh3, Anh Gia Pham4, Huy Hoang Nguyen4, Xuan Thanh Nguyen4, Hai Pham-The5, Phuong-Thao Tran5, Khanh Truong Vu6, Nhuong Xuan Duong7, Claudio Pelucchi8, Carlo La Vecchia8, Paolo Boffetta9, Hung D Nguyen2, Hung N Luu10,11.
Abstract
With over 1 million incidence cases and more than 780,000 deaths in 2018, gastric cancer (GC) was ranked as the 5th most common cancer and the 3rd leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Though several biomarkers, including carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), cancer antigen 19-9 (CA19-9), and cancer antigen 72-4 (CA72-4), have been identified, their diagnostic accuracies were modest. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cells derived from tumors and present in body fluids, have recently emerged as promising biomarkers, diagnostically and prognostically, of cancers, including GC. In this review, we present the landscape of CTCs from migration, to the presence in circulation, biologic properties, and morphologic heterogeneities. We evaluated clinical implications of CTCs in GC patients, including diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic management, as well as their application in immunotherapy. On the one hand, major challenges in using CTCs in GC were analyzed, from the differences of cut-off values of CTC positivity, to techniques used for sampling, storage conditions, and CTC molecular markers, as well as the unavailability of relevant enrichment and detection techniques. On the other hand, we discussed future perspectives of using CTCs in GC management and research, including the use of circulating tumor microembolies; of CTC checkpoint blockade in immunotherapy; and of organoid models. Despite the fact that there are remaining challenges in techniques, CTCs have potential as novel biomarkers and/or a non-invasive method for diagnostics, prognostics, and treatment monitoring of GC, particularly in the era of precision medicine.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cells; diagnostic; gastric cancer; prognostic; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32183503 PMCID: PMC7140068 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12030695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Systematic Review of the Clinical Significances of Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) in Gastric Cancer (GC) in Studies during 2015–2019 Period.
| Author, Country, Year | Cases | Isolation and Identification Tool | Markers | OS and PFS of CTC(+) vs. CTC(-) | Positive Cutoff | Clinical Implications | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lee | 100 metastatic GC patients | anti-EpCAM antibody coated magnetic particles CTC-Profiler (Veridex) | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, CD45 | OS: 120 days vs. 220 days; | ≥ 5CTCs/7.5 mL | CTCs are associated with poor response to chemotherapy in metastatic gastric cancer patients. | [ |
| Okabe | 136 advanced GC patients | semi-automated immunomagnetic separation system CellSearch | EpCAM, CK8/18/19CD45, DAPI | OS: HR 2.20 [95%CI: 1.120–4.03]; | ≥ 1 CTCs/7.5 mL | Detection of CTCs was an independent predictor of a shorter PFS in advanced gastric cancer. | [ |
| Zhou | 1110 GC patients in meta-analysis | - | - | OS: HR = 2.23, 95% CI: 1.86–2.66 | - | High CTCs count was associated with depth of infiltration regional lymph nodes metastasis and distant metastasis. | [ |
| Mishima(Japan), 2017 | 101 GC patients | both 3 D-IF-FISH method & CellSearch System3D-IF-FISH only | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, CD45 | OS and PFS of 15 advanced GC patients with CTC- HER2+: 6.1 months (95% CI: 2.1–10.0) and 14.4 months (11.0–17.8), respectively | ≥ 1 CTCs/7.5 mL | New, non-invasive strategy to select patients who are likely to benefit from trastuzumab-based therapies, despite their primary biopsy being HER2-negative. | [ |
| Liu (China), 2017 | 59 GC patients of stage II-IV | CELLection™ Epithelial Enrich kit | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, DAPI | OS: HR = 3.59, 95% CI:1.655-7.817, | ≥ 2 CTCs/5 mL | The baseline CTC count of >2 cells/5 mL and an increase of the CTC count after the first cycle of chemotherapy was an independent prognostic marker of poor PFS and OS→ patients with a low baseline CTC count or decrease of the CTC count after the first cycle of chemotherapy may benefit significantly from palliative chemotherapy | [ |
| Zheng | 81 GC patients | ISET-immunofluorescence | CK8/18/19, vimentin | CTM positivity was an independent factor for determining the PFS ( | ≥ 1 CTCs/5 mL | In stage IV patients, CTM positivity was correlated with serum CA125 level. CTM were an independent predictor of shorter PFS and OS in stage IV patients. → CTM detection may be a useful tool to predict prognosis in stage IV patients. | [ |
| Kang | 116 patients with gastric cancer patients & 31 healthy volunteers | “FAST disc” centrifugal microfluidic system | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, CD45 | - | ≥ 2 CTCs/7.5 mL | Although the clinical feasibility of CTCs for gastric cancer staging was not proved, these results suggest a potential role of CTCs as an early diagnostic biomarker of gastric cancer. | [ |
| Yue (China), 2018 | 35 patients with different advanced gastrointestinal tumors | Pep | CK19, CD45 DAPI, PD-L1 | PFS based on baseline PD-L1high CTC count: 4.27 vs. 2.07 months HR = 3.342; 95%CI 1.488–7.505; | ≥ 2 PD-L1high CTCs/4 mL | The abundance of PD-L1high CTCs at baseline might serve as a predictor to screen patients for PD-1/PD-L1 blockade therapies. | [ |
| Yang | 40 GC patients | wedge-shaped microfluidic chip (CTC-ΔChip) & three-color immunocytochemistry method | (CK, CD45, Nucleus marker | - | - | CTC-ΔChip exhibited the feasibility of detecting CTCs from different types of solid tumor, and it identified 7.30 ± 7.29 CTCs from 2 mL peripheral blood with a positive rate of 75% (30/40) in GC patients. | [ |
| Li (China), 2018 | 115 advanced GC patients, including 56 tumor HER2+ subjects who received first-line HER2-targeted therapy plus chemotherapy and 59 tumor HER2− subjects who received chemotherapy alone | IF-FISH Cytelligen system | DAPI, HER2, CEP8, and CD45 | - | - | CTC HER2+ was found in 91.0% of tumor HER2+ and 76.2% tumor HER2− patients and was correlated with development of resistance to trastuzumab for the tumor HER2+ patients and chemotherapy alone for the tumor HER2− patients. | [ |
| Cheng (China), 2019 | 32 advanced GC patients | CanPatrol CTC enrichment technique | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, CD45 | - | ≥ 2 PD-L1+ CTCs/5 mL | CTCs count was well correlated with clinicopathology parameters. | [ |
| Lu | 42 GC patients of stage III-IV | ISET-ICC method followed by IHC | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, CD45, | - | - | The threshold number of CTCs is significantly associated with different clinical stages and was positively correlated with the value in U/mL of CA724. | [ |
| Abdallah | At diagnosis (55 samples before neoadjuvant treatment) | ISET and immunocytochemistry & microscopy | HER2 and plakoglobin, CD45 | -PFS between CTM-positive patients vs. CTM-negative patients (18.7 months vs. 21.6 months; | ≥ 1 CTM (2 CTCs)/4 mL | The analysis of CTM plakoglobin expression is a promising tool in the understanding the biology and prognosis of GC. | [ |
| Gao, 2019 | 3814 GC patients in meta-analysis | - | - | HR = 1.84, 95%CI 1.50–2.26, | - | CTC positivity was associated with poorer OS. | [ |
CellSearch: semi-automated immunomagnetic separation system; CTM: circulating tumor microembolies; FISH: fluorescent in situ hybridization; IF: immunofluorescence; ISET: isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells; ICC: immunocytochemistry; IHC: immunohistochemistry; OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival.
Figure 1The predictive utility of CTCs in gastric cancer treatment. High baseline or acquired CTCs count was associated with decreased OS, PFS, and DC. The HER2 and PD-L1 positivity or high amplification could predict positive response to trastuzumab and checkpoint therapy, respectively. Meanwhile, the CD44+ CTCs were associated with poor prognosis and metastasis.
Figure 2The future perspectives of CTCs in gastric cancer. Understanding GC-CTCs signatures would facilitate the use CTC subpopulations and CTMs in GC prognosis and as potential targets in anti-metastasis treatment; the use of immune checkpoint molecules on CTC surface as targets for GC immunotherapy; and the use of CTC organoids in cancer real-time monitoring and as in vitro and in vivo models for drug discovery.