| Literature DB >> 35582538 |
Gianluigi De Renzi1, Giulia De Marco1, Michela De Meo1, Eleonora Del Rosso1, Paola Gazzaniga1, Chiara Nicolazzo1.
Abstract
Since taking part as leading actors in driving the metastatic process, circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have displayed a wide range of potential applications in the cancer-related research field. Besides their well-proved prognostic value, the role of CTCs in both predictive and diagnostics terms might be extremely informative about cancer properties and therefore highly helpful in the clinical decision-making process. Unfortunately, CTCs are scarcely released in the blood circulation and their counts vary a lot among different types of cancer, therefore CTC detection and consequent characterization are still highly challenging. In this context, in vitro CTC cultures could potentially offer a great opportunity to expand the number of tumor cells isolated at different stages of the disease and thus simplify the analysis of their biological and molecular features, allowing a deeper comprehension of the nature of neoplastic diseases. The aim of this review is to highlight the main attempts to establish in vitro CTC cultures from patients harboring different tumor types in order to highlight how powerful this practice could be, especially in optimizing the therapeutic strategies available in clinical practice and potentially preventing or contrasting the development of treatment resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Liquid biopsy; biomarker evaluation; cell cultures; circulating tumor cell cultures; circulating tumor cells; drug sensitivity; liquid tumor biomarkers; precision medicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35582538 PMCID: PMC8992597 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2021.121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Figure 1Schematic examples of the most commonly used technologies for circulating tumor cell (CTC) enrichment, detection, and isolation.
Examples of strategies for viable circulating tumor cell (CTC) isolation
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| Protein expression-based technologies | RosetteSep® | Antibody cocktail for negative selection | Short-term | Guo |
| CTC-iChip | Micro fluidic capture platform with two immune magnetic sorting modes to isolate CTCs | Long-term | Yu | |
| Physical property-based technologies | Ficoll® | Density gradient media that allow the separation of circulating tumor cells from blood cells through centrifugation | / | Guo |
| MetaCell® | 8 μm-pore polycarbonate membrane-based technique. | Short-term | Kolostova K. | |
| Parsortix® | Cell size and deformability microchips isolation based technique | / | Guo | |
| Function-based technologies | Collagen adhesion matrix assay (CAM) | Method based on tumor cells’ ability to attach and ingest collagen adhesion matrix | / | Guo |
| EPithelial ImmunoSPOT assay (EPISPOT) | Detection of proteins secreted or released by viable cancer cell | Short-term | Guo | |
| Long-term | Cayrefourcq |
Figure 2Potential use of circulating tumor cell (CTC) cultures as a predictor for drug sensitivity/resistance, guiding to a more personalized type of therapy.
Patients involved, CTC lines obtained and drug sensitivities
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| Yu | Metastatic luminal subtype breast cancers | 36 | 6 | BRx-33 |
| / |
| BRx-07 |
| Paclitaxel*, fulvestrant* and doxorubicin* | ||||
| BRx-68 |
| Capecitabine*, fulvestrant* | ||||
| BRx-50 |
| Capecitabine*, olaparib* | ||||
| BRx-42 |
| / | ||||
| BRx-61 |
| / | ||||
| Hamilton | Small cell lung cancer | 2 | 2 | BHGc7 | / | Cisplatin, etoposide, topotecan and epirubicin |
| BHGc10 | / | Etoposide, topotecan and epirubicin | ||||
| Grillet | Metastatic colorectal cancer | / | 3 | CTC41 |
| Resistant to FIRI (regimen inspired by standard-of-care chemotherapy combinations |
| CTC44 | ||||||
| CTC45 | ||||||
| Brungs | Metastatic | 20 | 1 | UWG01CTC | Genes for neuroendocrine markers ( | Synergism at all concentrations of carboplatin and etoposide |
| 41 | 1 | UWG02CTC |
| 30-40× more sensitive to doxorubicin and etoposide than UWG01CTC | ||
| Lee | Small cell lung cancer | 22 | 18 | / |
| CTC lines from patients 14 and 20 showed high sensitivity to standard treatment for SCLC patients (cisplatin/etoposide), whereas these drugs exhibited no cytotoxicity in the CTC line from patient 15, reflecting patient lack of response to this therapy |
*Sensitivity to these drugs was consistent with clinical history of the patients. CTC: Circulating tumor cells; EMT: epithelial-mesenchymal transition; FIRI: fluorouracil and irinotecan; FGFR 1 and 2: fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 and 2; HSP90: heat shock protein 90; PIK3CA: phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha.