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      CK-coated magnetic-based beads as a tool to isolate circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in human tumors.

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          Abstract

          Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can be detected in the blood of many cancer patients and play a key role in metastasis. In addition, after the development of technologies with the necessary sensitivity and reproducibility, the diagnostic potential of these cells is being actively explored. Recently, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the CellSearch(®) System, based on magnetic beads coated with epithelial cell-adhesion molecule (EpCAM) antibody. Despite its usefulness, this system can miss CTCs that lose epithelial antigens due to the epithelial-mesenchymal transition and, in the case of advanced NSCLC, CTCs positivity can be demonstrated only in 30-50% of patients. In an effort to overcome these drawbacks, new methods are being developed. In this study, we have evaluated CK-coated beads as a system to isolate CTCs from lung cancer patients in the clinical setting, and have evaluated if they can be a useful source of material for genetic testing. We were able to identify CTCs in 17 of the 30 patients included in the study (57%), with a range of 1 to 7 cells. In two of them, we found only CTCs with an EMT pattern. CTC positivity seemed to correlate with the clinical history of the malignancy. CTCs could be detected in more than 80% of stage III-IV lung cancer patients at presentation or in blood samples taken immediately after surgery. The percentage dropped to 13% in patients responding to chemotherapy or TKIs, raising again to 57% after tumor progression. Finally, we tested the CTCs isolated from 8 patients for EGFR and k-ras mutations, but gene amplification was successful only in the 3 patients with 4 or more CTCs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Transl Lung Cancer Res
          Translational lung cancer research
          2218-6751
          2218-6751
          Apr 2013
          : 2
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Breakthrought Cancer Unit, Laboratory of Oncology, Pangaea Biotech, Dexeus University Hospital, Barcelona, Spain ;
          [2 ] GENYO, Centre for Genomics and Oncological Research, Pfizer-University of Granada-Andalusian Regional Government, Granada, Spain ;
          [3 ] Breakthrought Cancer Unit, Laboratory of Oncology, Pangaea Biotech, Dexeus University Hospital, Barcelona, Spain ; ; Catalan Institute of Oncology, Hospital Germans Trias i Pujol, Badalona, Spain.
          Article
          tlcr-02-02-065
          10.3978/j.issn.2218-6751.2013.02.06
          4369853
          25806217
          afaa2245-d122-4ad2-9589-5336ff5436e6
          History

          EMT transition,mutation,lung cancer,Circulating tumor cells

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