Improving the yield of circulating tumour cells facilitates molecular characterisation and recognition of discordant HER2 amplification in breast cancer.

TitleImproving the yield of circulating tumour cells facilitates molecular characterisation and recognition of discordant HER2 amplification in breast cancer.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsFlores LM, Kindelberger DW, Ligon AH, Capelletti M, Fiorentino M, Loda M, Cibas ES, Jänne PA, Krop IE
JournalBr J Cancer
Volume102
Issue10
Pagination1495-502
Date Published2010 May 11
ISSN1532-1827
KeywordsBreast Neoplasms, Female, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Gene Amplification, Genes, erbB-2, Humans, Immunomagnetic Separation, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Neoplastic Cells, Circulating
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) offer a non-invasive approach to obtain and characterise metastatic tumour cells, but their usefulness has been limited by low CTC yields from conventional isolation methods.

METHODS: To improve CTC yields and facilitate their molecular characterisation we compared the Food and Drug Administration-approved CellSearch Epithelial Kit (CEK) to a simplified CTC capture method, CellSearch Profile Kit (CPK), on paired blood samples from patients with metastatic breast (n=75) and lung (n=71) cancer. Molecular markers including Human Epidermal growth factor Receptor 2 (HER2) were evaluated on CTCs by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) and compared to patients' primary and metastatic cancer.

RESULTS: The median cell count from patients with breast cancer using the CPK was 117 vs 4 for CEK (P<0.0001). Lung cancer samples were similar; CPK: 145 cells vs CEK:4 cells (P<0.0001). Recovered CTCs were relatively pure (60-70%) and were evaluable by FISH and immunofluorescence. A total of 10 of 30 (33%) breast cancer patients with HER2-negative primary and metastatic tissue had HER2-amplified CTCs.

CONCLUSION: The CPK method provides a high yield of relatively pure CTCs, facilitating their molecular characterisation. Circulating tumour cells obtained using CPK technology demonstrate that significant discordance exists between HER2 amplification of a patient's CTCs and that of the primary and metastatic tumour.

DOI10.1038/sj.bjc.6605676
Alternate JournalBr J Cancer
PubMed ID20461092
Grant ListP50CA090578 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
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Massimo Loda, M.D.

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