Circulating tumor cells as a biomarker for monitoring: Disease progression, treatment response, and minimal residual disease.

Author:

Raut Nirmal Vivek1,Bharde Atul2,Gourishankar Aland3,Jayant Sreeja3,Garbhe Meghana4,Gosavi Sayali4,Janorkar Apoorva4,D'Souza Alain3,Vasudevan Aravindan5,Khandare Jayant6

Affiliation:

1. School of Consciousness, Dr. Vishwanath Karad MIT-World Peace University, Pune, India;

2. Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, India;

3. Actorius Innovations and Research Pvt. Ltd., Pune, India;

4. Actorius Research and innovations, Pune, India;

5. Actorius Research and innovations Co., Cupertino, CA;

6. Onecell Diagnostics, Cupertino, CA;

Abstract

e15021 Background: To analyze the role of Circulating tumor cells (CTC) as a confirmatory personalized biomarker for monitoring the disease progression, disease burden, and minimal residual disease in epithelial origin cancers. Methods: In this retrospective study, 127 patients with colorectal, breast, and ovarian cancer at stage III and IV were analyzed. The patients were at various stages of intensive chemo and radiotherapy while the CTCs were isolated and enumerated from 1.5 ml of blood. The decision to continue chemotherapy or change to oral metronomic therapy was based on the presence of circulating tumor cells in Stage III. While in stage IV, serial measurement of CTC guided therapy. CTCs were isolated using OncoDiscover platform possessing EpCAM antibody based immunomagnetic targeting of magnetic nanoparticles after RBC lysis. CTCs were imaged and identified as CK18+ and CD45- cells showing a well-defined nucleus using a motorized fluorescence microscope operational with a monochrome camera. CTCs were enumerated using automated image analysis software and counts were expressed as number per 1.5 ml of blood. Results: In this retrospective study we analyzed blood sample from 127 patients with the advanced stage epithelial cancers (breast- 50 %, ovarian -27 %, colorectal- 23 %) for the presence of CTCs. Amongst those, 52 % showed the presence of CTCs (breast- 52 %, ovarian -46 %, colorectal- 58 %). The CTC count ranged between 1-5 / 1.5 ml of blood with mean and median value of 2 and 1. Among the CTC positive population, majority had CTC count of 1 (44.4 %), while more than 2 CTCs were observed in 11 % of population. CTC clusters were detected in 13 % of population which predominantly were stage IV patients. 67 % among the follow up patients showed decrease in CTC count from the baseline due to the prescribed treatment, while 22 % patients showed increase in CTC count from the baseline. 11 % patients did not show change in CTC count from the baseline. When CTCs count was investigated as an independent variable to monitor the therapeutic response, it correlated well with the positive or negative outcome. In few representative cases, the reduction of CTC number from the basal value was indicative of an effective treatment. Exceptionally, in a representative colorectal cancer case, PET showed no primary as well secondary tumor burden, but the presence of CTCs in blood led further investigating an abdominal MRI that indicated multiple liver lesions suggesting micro-metastasis. Subsequent to SIRT treatment, the patient showed complete tumor regression and absence of CTCs in peripheral blood. Conclusions: Our data suggest that CTC can serve as a dynamic intermittent biomarker for monitoring the disease progression in advanced stages and assess the therapeutic response, thus emphasizing the role of CTCs in personalized cancer management.

Funder

None.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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