Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION Extracellular Vesicles (EVs) are lipid bilayer particles present in almost all biofluids and carry tumor-specific molecular cargo. Plasma EVs are promising sources of biomarker discovery for glioblastoma (GBM). The clinical relevance of non-neoplastic plasma EVs in GBM remains unclear. In this study, we determine if associations exist between plasma EV subpopulation frequencies in GBM and clinical factors. METHODS Platelet-free plasma samples of 63 GBM, 43 Grade 2 glioma, and 45 healthy donors were included. All glioma plasma samples were collected before surgery. Plasma EV subpopulation frequency based on surface expression of EV-associated tetraspanins (CD9/CD81/CD63) and markers of cell origin (CD45/CD41a/CD11b/CD31) was determined by spectral flow cytometry. Clinical information including age, surgery, MGMT methylation status, corticosteroid usage, tumor volume, and overall survival data was recorded. RESULTS Compared to normal donors, GBM patients had increased CD9+, CD63+, CD81+, and CD11b+ EVs but decreased CD41a+ EVs. GBM patients also had the highest frequency of myeloid-derived CD9+CD11b+ EVs (20.17%) followed by grade 2 gliomas (13.78%) and normal donors (2.76%, p< 0.001). More GBM patients (29/63, 46.0%) received preoperative corticosteroids than grade 2 glioma patients (9/43, 20.9%; p = 0.008). Corticosteroid use was not associated with differences in EV subpopulation frequencies in GBM or grade 2 glioma patients. Pearson correlation analysis showed weak but statistically significant correlations between GBM total tumor volume and CD9+ EVs (p = 0.014), CD41a+ EVs (p = 0.037), and CD9+/CD63-/CD81- EVs (p = 0.007). In GBM patients, younger age (< 60 yrs, p = 0.01), gross total resection (p = 0.02), MGMT methylation (p = 0.002), high CD9+ EV expression (p = 0.011), low CD9+CD63-CD81- EV expression (p = 0.009) and low CD9+CD11b+ EV expression (p = 0.006) correlated with longer overall survival. CONCLUSION Differentially expressed non-neoplastic plasma EV subpopulations have significant clinical relevance in GBM including association with tumor volume and predicting survival. Validation of those markers in larger cohorts could reveal new prognostic biomarkers for GBM.

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