4.5 Article

Detecting and phenotyping of aneuploid circulating tumor cells in patients with various malignancies

Journal

CANCER BIOLOGY & THERAPY
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 546-551

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15384047.2018.1538000

Keywords

Circulating tumor cells; CTCs; EpCAM; Vimentin; iFISH

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program [2017YFC0909800]
  2. National Science Fund Projects [8167110226, 81703047]
  3. Study on the application system of tumor intelligence precision medical treatment based on large health data of Shanghai Informatization Development Special project [201602037]
  4. Capacity Building Project of Shanghai Engineering Research Center [16DZ2281000]

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Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have been exclusively studied and served to assess the clinical outcomes of treatments and progression of cancer. Most CTC data have mainly been derived from distinct cohorts or selected tumor types. In the present study, a total of 594 blood samples from 479 cases with 19 different carcinomas and 30 healthy samples were collected and analyzed by Subtraction enrichment method combined with immunostaining-fluorescence in situ hybridization (iFISH). Non-hematopoietic cells with aneuploid chromosome 8 (more than 2 copies) were regarded as positive CTCs. The results showed that none of CTCs was found in all 30 healthy samples. The overall positive rate of CTCs was 89.0% in diagnosed cancer patients (ranging from 75.0% to 100.0%). Average number of 11, 5, 8 and 4 CTCs per 7.5 mL was observed in lung cancer, liver cancer, renal cancer and colorectal cancer, respectively. Among 19 different carcinomas, the total number of CTCs, tetraploid chromosome 8, polyploid chromosome 8, CTM (Circulating tumor microemboli) and large CTCs in patients with stage Ⅲ and Ⅳ were statistically higher than patients with stage ROMAN NUMERAL ONE and II (P < 0.05). Furthermore, EpCAM expression was more frequently found in most CTCs than vimentin expression, confirming that these CTCs were of epithelial origin. In addition, small and large CTCs were also classified, and the expression of vimentin was mostly observed in small CTCs and CTM. Our results revealed that there are higher numbers of CTCs, tetraploid, polyploid and large CTCs in patients with stage Ⅲ and Ⅳ, indicating that the quantification of chromosome ploidy performed by SE-iFISH for CTCs might be a useful tool to predict and evaluate therapeutic efficacy as well as to monitoring disease progression.

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