| Literature DB >> 35637960 |
Zixin Feng1, Junyu Wu1, Yuanjun Lu1, Yau-Tuen Chan1, Cheng Zhang1, Di Wang2, Dan Luo3, Yuan Huang3, Yibin Feng1, Ning Wang1.
Abstract
Cancer is a severe disease with high morbidity and mortality globally. Thus, early detection is emerging as an important topic in modern oncology. Although the strategies for early detection have developed rapidly in recent decades, they remain challenging due to the subtle symptoms in the initial stage of the primary tumor. Currently, tumor biomarkers, imaging, and specific screening tests are widely used in various cancer types; however, each method has limitations. The harms are even overweight against the benefits in some cases. Therefore, early detection approaches should be improved urgently. Liquid biopsy, for now, is a convenient and non-invasive way compared to the traditional tissue biopsy in screening and early diagnosis. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are vital in liquid biopsy and play a central role in tumor dissemination and metastases. They have promising potential as cancer biomarkers in early detection. This review updates the knowledge of the biology of CTC; it also highlights the CTC enrichment technologies and their applications in the early detection of several human cancers. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Cancer metastasis; Circulating tumor cell (CTC); Early detection; Human cancers; Liquid biopsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35637960 PMCID: PMC9134923 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.71768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 10.750
Figure 1The biology of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in human cancers. (A) CTC is a significant indicator of the disease progression or death in patients with solid metastatic cancer (e.g., lung, breast, liver, pancreatic, colon, prostate, ovarian, etc.). (B) Schematic representation of CTCs shedding from primary tumor foci, circulating through the blood vessels, and creating a secondary metastasis in the distant organs. In general, CTCs undergo epithelial-to-mesenchymal transmission (EMT), where cancerous epithelial cells lose their cellular connection and gain a more aggressive mesenchymal characteristic. CTCs overcome the stresses in blood flow and reach the distant site. Then they transition back to the epithelial characteristics and develop metastatic tumor masses. CTC can present as a single cell or gather into a cluster to enhance the metastatic ability.
Mechanism of CTCs participate in cancer metastasis
| Biological process of | Characteristics of CTCs | Expression of the related | Expression of the factors in tumor microenvironment | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intravasation and Angiogenesis | - Motility (active intravasation); | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, E-cadherin↓; | TGF-β↑ (CAF); | -CTCs undergo EMT and enter into bloodstream; |
| Survival maintenance | -Anoikis resistance; | CD47, PD-L1, FASL↑; | TLRs↓ (macrophage and NK cell); | -CTCs overcome the shear stress and anoikis; |
| Extravasation and Colonization | -Mesenchymal to Epithelial plasticity; | EpCAM, CK8/18/19, E-cadherin↑; | TGF-β↑ (platelet) | -CTCs undergo MET and leave the bloodstream; |
Figure 2Current technologies for CTC detection. (A) CTCs rarely appear in the peripheral blood of cancer patients. Approximately one CTC can be detected per milliliter of the blood sample with millions of background blood cells. (B) The strategies for CTCs isolating and enrichment can be divided into label-dependent and -independent techniques, which are based on their biological or physical properties. Among label-dependent techniques, immunomagnetic separation is the most common. EpCAM (epithelial cell adhesion molecule) antibodies can be coated on ferrofluids (CellSearch®) and magnetic beads (AdnaTest® & MagSweeper) for positive selection, while negative selection depletes white blood cell (WBC) by recognizing CD45 (Cyttel). Label-independent methods include enrichment by size (microfluidic chips), electric charge (DEPArray™), and density (OncoQick®). (C) After enrichment, the captured CTCs are prepared for downstream analysis by immunostaining using antibodies against cancer-related proteins; by PCR targeting tumor-specific nucleic acid sequences; by in vitro cell culture or in vivo xenograft model for the following functional research. (D) CTCs as liquid biopsy materials have great potential to participate in early detection, diagnosis, monitoring for cancer recurrence, and prediction of individualized treatment.
Technologies for CTC detection and their application in human cancers (Label-dependent)
| Technologies | Isolation and | Identification and | Specification and | Limitations | Merits | Cancer type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -CellSearch® system | -Positive selection; | -The captured cells are confirmed by IF stained with CK 8, 18,19 but an absence of CD45 | -Sensitivity: 27%, 32%, 70%; | -Miss EMT-CTCs due to EpCAM dependent | -First FDA approved, | -Breast, | |
| -AdnaTest® | -Positive selection; | -Tested by multiplex RT-PCR for various gene panels (e.g., prostate: KLK3, PSMA, and EGFR; breast: MUC-1, Her2) | -Sensitivity: 73%; | -Contamination with WBCs | -High sensitivity; | -Breast, | |
| -MagSweeper | -The magnetically-labeled CD133+ cells were purified | -Whole transcriptome analysis with RNA-Seq | -Sensitivity: 100% | -Expensive; | -High purity; | -Breast, | |
| MACS system | -Both positive and negative selection; | -Automated analysis after combined anti- CK/CD45/DAPI staining | -Detect rate: 5/17 | -Identifies EpCAM negative cells but not CK negative ones | -High efficiency | -Lung (NSCL), |
|
| CTC-iChip | -Both positive and negative selection; | -Molecularly characterized by RT-PCR | -Detection limit: <30 CTCs/7.5 mL; | -Low purity (around 8%); | -Combination of biological and physical properties | -Prostate | |
| RosetteSep™ | -Negative selection; | -Followed by flow cytometry | -Sensitivity: 59%; | -Low recovery rate | -Sensitive | -Pancreatic, | |
| Cyttel | -Negative selection; | -Slide smearing; | -Sensitivity: 83.05%; | -Lack of standardized clinical protocols | -High detection rate; | -Lung (NSCLC), |
Technologies for CTC detection and their application in human cancers (Label-independent)
| Technologies | Isolation and | Identification and | Specification and | Limitations | Merits | Cancer type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parsortix™ system | -Size (employ Microfluidic chips) | -Immunostaining (CD45, CK, and vimentin) | -Capture rate: 81% | -Buffy-coat enrichment and CTC loss due to different size ranges | - Allows reverse flow | -Ovarian; | |
| ISET® | -Size (filter-based isolation and enrichment) | -IHC | -Sensitivity: 76.37% | -Miss CTCs due to their morphological heterogeneity | -High efficiency compared to CellSearch | -HCC, | |
| OncoQuick® | -Density (separation of blood cells by porous membrane filtration then followed by density-grade centrifugation for CTC collection) | -RT-PCR targeting CEA, CK20, and TEM-8 in CRC; | -Recovery: 87%; | -Low purity; | -Price reasonable; | -Colorectal; |
|
| DEPArray™ | -Electric charge based for single CTC capture | -Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) | -N/A | -Limited volume; | -Single CTC isolation; | -Early stage of BC; |