Effect of circulating tumor cells combined with negative enrichment and CD45-FISH identification in diagnosis, therapy monitoring and prognosis of primary lung cancer

被引:42
作者
Chen, Yang-Yang [1 ]
Xu, Guo-Bin [1 ]
机构
[1] Peking Univ, Hosp 1, Dept Clin Lab, Beijing 100034, Peoples R China
关键词
Primary lung cancer; CTCs; CD45-FISH; Diagnosis; Treatment monitoring; Prognosis; PERIPHERAL-BLOOD; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1007/s12032-014-0240-0
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are valuable for diagnosis, monitoring therapy and prognosis in primary lung cancer. Herein, we evaluated the clinical significance of lung cancer CTCs in this study. Detection of CTCs was performed using epithelial cell adhesion molecule-independent enrichment and CD45 fluorescence in situ hybridization detection. CTCs >= 2/3.2 mL were considered as positive. The positive rates in primary lung cancer, benign lung disease and healthy control groups were 84, 0 and 4.2 %. CTCs count was significantly higher in lung cancer patients than healthy controls and benign lung disease, with an area under ROC curve of 0.917 (95 % confidence interval 0.855-0.979; p = 0.000) between lung cancer and nonmalignant diseases. CTCs count significantly increased with an increase in pathological stage with mean count of 2.3 +/- 2.6 (stage I-II), 3.5 +/- 3.3 (stage III) and 4.5 +/- 4.3 (stage IV), respectively. The positive detection rate of CTCs for primary lung cancer diagnosis was higher than serum tumor markers. In total, 25 metastasis lung cancer patients participated in the follow-up. Changes in CTCs count after two cycles of chemotherapy were consistent with radiographic appearance. Moreover, CTCs count was better than serum tumor markers for monitoring chemotherapy response. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 2.05, 3.25 and 8.348 months (p < 0.05) in group in which post-treatment CTCs count was increased, unchanged and decreased, respectively. Furthermore, PFS in patients whose post-treatment CTCs count increased or were unchanged accompanied by a baseline CTCs count <3 was significantly shorter than those whose post-treatment CTCs count decreased or was unchanged accompanied with baseline value C3 (1.85 vs. 8.22 months, p = 0.000). Therefore, CTCs are a reproducible indicator of disease status that may be superior to imaging.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 9
页数:9
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]   Apoptotic circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the peripheral blood of metastatic colorectal cancer patients are associated with liver metastasis but not CTCs [J].
Allen, Joshua E. ;
Saroya, Bikramajit Singh ;
Kunkel, Miriam ;
Dicker, David T. ;
Das, Avisnata ;
Peters, Kristi L. ;
Joudeh, Jamal ;
Zhu, Junjia ;
El-Deiry, Wafik S. .
ONCOTARGET, 2014, 5 (07) :1753-1760
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1997, AM J RESP CRIT CARE, V156, P320
[3]   Lung cancer circulating tumor cells isolated by the EpCAM-independent enrichment strategy correlate with Cytokeratin 19-derived CYFRA21-1 and pathological staging [J].
Chen, Qian ;
Ge, Feng ;
Cui, Wei ;
Wang, Fei ;
Yang, Zhuo ;
Guo, Ye ;
Li, Longyun ;
Bremner, Ross Macrae ;
Lin, Peter Ping .
CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2013, 419 :57-61
[4]   Cytokeratin-based CTC counting unrelated to clinical follow up [J].
Domingos Chinen, Ludmilla Thome ;
de Carvalho, Fernanda Machado ;
Malagoli Rocha, Bruna Maria ;
Aguiar, Caroline Motta ;
Abdallah, Emne Ali ;
Campanha, Daniel ;
Mingues, Natalia Breve ;
de Oliveira, Thiago Bueno ;
Maciel, Macello Sampaio ;
Cervantes, Gustavo Marchioro ;
Dettino, Aldo L. A. ;
Soares, Fernando Augusto ;
Paterlini-Brechot, Patrizia ;
Fanelli, Marcello Ferretti .
JOURNAL OF THORACIC DISEASE, 2013, 5 (05) :593-+
[5]   A direct comparison of CellSearch and ISET for circulating tumour-cell detection in patients with metastatic carcinomas [J].
Farace, F. ;
Massard, C. ;
Vimond, N. ;
Drusch, F. ;
Jacques, N. ;
Billiot, F. ;
Laplanche, A. ;
Chauchereau, A. ;
Lacroix, L. ;
Planchard, D. ;
Le Moulec, S. ;
Andre, F. ;
Fizazi, K. ;
Soria, J. C. ;
Vielh, P. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2011, 105 (06) :847-853
[6]   American society of clinical oncology 2007 update of recommendations for the use of tumor markers in breast cancer [J].
Harris, Lyndsay ;
Fritsche, Herbert ;
Mennel, Robert ;
Norton, Larry ;
Ravdin, Peter ;
Taube, Sheila ;
Somerfield, Mark R. ;
Hayes, Daniel F. ;
Bast, Robert C., Jr. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2007, 25 (33) :5287-5312
[7]   Circulating tumor cells as a prognostic factor in patients with small cell lung cancer [J].
Igawa, Satoshi ;
Gohda, Keigo ;
Fukui, Tomoya ;
Ryuge, Shinichiro ;
Otani, Sakiko ;
Masago, Akinori ;
Sato, Jun ;
Murakami, Katsuhiro ;
Maki, Sachiyo ;
Katono, Ken ;
Takakura, Akira ;
Sasaki, Jiichiro ;
Satoh, Yukitoshi ;
Masuda, Noriyuki .
ONCOLOGY LETTERS, 2014, 7 (05) :1469-1473
[8]  
Johnson TM, 1996, MAYO CLIN PROC, V71, P643
[9]   Genetically Abnormal Circulating Cells in Lung Cancer Patients: An Antigen-Independent Fluorescence In situ Hybridization-Based Case-Control Study [J].
Katz, Ruth L. ;
He, Weigong ;
Khanna, Abha ;
Fernandez, Ricardo L. ;
Zaidi, Tanweer M. ;
Krebs, Matthew ;
Caraway, Nancy P. ;
Zhang, Hua-Zhong ;
Jiang, Feng ;
Spitz, Margaret R. ;
Blowers, David P. ;
Jimenez, Carlos A. ;
Mehran, Reza J. ;
Swisher, Stephen G. ;
Roth, Jack A. ;
Morris, Jeffrey S. ;
Etzel, Carol J. ;
El-Zein, Randa .
CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2010, 16 (15) :3976-3987
[10]   Evaluation and Prognostic Significance of Circulating Tumor Cells in Patients With Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer [J].
Krebs, Matthew G. ;
Sloane, Robert ;
Priest, Lynsey ;
Lancashire, Lee ;
Hou, Jian-Mei ;
Greystoke, Alastair ;
Ward, Tim H. ;
Ferraldeschi, Roberta ;
Hughes, Andrew ;
Clack, Glen ;
Ranson, Malcolm ;
Dive, Caroline ;
Blackhall, Fiona H. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2011, 29 (12) :1556-1563