4.7 Article

Circulating tumor cells for comprehensive and multiregional non-invasive genetic characterization of multiple myeloma

Journal

LEUKEMIA
Volume 34, Issue 11, Pages 3007-3018

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-020-0883-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red-Area de Oncologia-del Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CIBERONC) [CB16/12/00236, CB16/12/00369, CB16/12/00489, CB16/12/00400]
  2. Cancer Research UK [C355/A26819]
  3. FC AECC under the Accelerator Award Program
  4. AIRC under the Accelerator Award Program
  5. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [AC17/00101]
  6. FCAECC [AC17/00101]
  7. FEDER [AC17/00101]
  8. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PTQ-16-08623]
  9. FSE (Torres Quevedo fellowship) [PTQ-16-08623]
  10. Black Swan Research Initiative of the International Myeloma Foundation
  11. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Commission's H2020 Framework Programme (MYELOMANEXT) [680200]
  12. Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) [7-916-3-237]
  13. AACR-Millennium Fellowship in Multiple Myeloma Research [15-40-38-PAIV]
  14. Leukemia Research Foundation
  15. Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF)
  16. European Research Council (ERC) [680200] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Multiple myeloma (MM) patients undergo repetitive bone marrow (BM) aspirates for genetic characterization. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are detectable in peripheral blood (PB) of virtually all MM cases and are prognostic, but their applicability for noninvasive screening has been poorly investigated. Here, we used next-generation flow (NGF) cytometry to isolate matched CTCs and BM tumor cells from 53 patients and compared their genetic profile. In eight cases, tumor cells from extramedullary (EM) plasmacytomas were also sorted and whole-exome sequencing was performed in the three spatially distributed tumor samples. CTCs were detectable by NGF in the PB of all patients with MM. Based on the cancer cell fraction of clonal and subclonal mutations, we found that similar to 22% of CTCs egressed from a BM (or EM) site distant from the matched BM aspirate. Concordance between BM tumor cells and CTCs was high for chromosome arm-level copy number alterations (>= 95%) though not for translocations (39%). All high-risk genetic abnormalities except one t(4;14) were detected in CTCs whenever present in BM tumor cells. Noteworthy, >= 82% mutations present in BM and EM clones were detectable in CTCs. Altogether, these results support CTCs for noninvasive risk-stratification of MM patients based on their numbers and genetic profile.

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