A pilot study to explore circulating tumour cells in pancreatic cancer as a novel biomarker

Leila Khoja(Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute), Alison Backen(Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute), R Sloane(Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute), Lia P. Menasce(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), W. David J. Ryder(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Matthew Krebs(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), R Board(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Glen Clack(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), Andrew Hughes(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), Fiona Blackhall(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Juan W. Valle(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Caroline Dive(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre)
British Journal of Cancer
December 20, 2011
Cited by 254Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obtaining tissue for pancreatic carcinoma diagnosis and biomarker assessment to aid drug development is challenging. Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) may represent a potential biomarker to address these unmet needs. We compared prospectively the utility of two platforms for CTC enumeration and characterisation in pancreatic cancer patients in a pilot exploratory study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Blood samples were obtained prospectively from 54 consenting patients and analysed by CellSearch and isolation by size of epithelial tumour cells (ISET). CellSearch exploits immunomagnetic capture of CTCs-expressing epithelial markers, whereas ISET is a marker independent, blood filtration device. Circulating tumour cell expression of epithelial and mesenchymal markers was assessed to explore any discrepancy in CTC number between the two platforms. RESULTS: ISET detected CTCs in more patients than CellSearch (93% vs 40%) and in higher numbers (median CTCs/7.5 ml, 9 (range 0-240) vs 0 (range 0-144)). Heterogeneity observed for epithelial cell adhesion molecule, pan-cytokeratin (CK), E-Cadherin, Vimentin and CK 7 expression in CTCs may account for discrepancy in CTC number between platforms. CONCLUSION: ISET detects more CTCs than CellSearch and offers flexible CTC characterisation with potential to investigate CTC biology and develop biomarkers for pancreatic cancer patient management.


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