Abstract
The utility of glypican-3 (GPC3) expression for the detection of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients has not been elucidated. The aim of this study was to identify associations between the presence of GPC3-positive CTCs and clinicopathological factors of these patients, furthermore, to evaluate whether CTC can predict microscopic portal vein invasion (mPVI). This study was done on 85 patients who underwent hepatectomy as the first-line treatment and whose preoperative imaging showed no evidence of macroscopic PVI and distant metastases. Peripheral blood was collected from all patients immediately before surgery. Cells were purified initially by density gradient centrifugation followed by immunomagnetic positive enrichment based upon the expression of GPC3. The numbers of CTCs contained in the enriched samples were enumerated via flow cytometry. Protocol validation using HepG2 cells spiked into 8.0 mL of blood from a healthy volunteer indicated that we were able to recover 12.1% of the tumor cells. A median number of 3 CTCs (range: 0–27) was detected in the 8.0 mL of peripheral blood of the 85 analyzed HCC patients. Thirty-three patients had CTCs ≥5, and these patients had a higher incidence of mPVI (p < 0.001), a lower disease-free survival (p = 0.015), and a lower overall survival (p = 0.047) than those with CTCs <5. Multivariate analysis identified CTCs ≥5 as an independent predictor of mPVI (p < 0.001). In conclusion, preoperative GPC3-positive CTCs ≥5 was a risk factor of mPVI and poor prognosis, and therefore may be a useful biomarker for HCC patient outcomes.
Highlights
GPC3-positive cells, or HepG2 cells, were enumerated via flow cytometry after density gradient centrifugation and immuno-magnetic positive enrichment based upon expression of GPC3
circulating tumor cells (CTCs) were enumerated via flow cytometry after density gradient centrifugation and immuno-magnetic positive enrichment based upon expression of GPC3 in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients
The present study found that patients in the GPC3-positive CTC 5 group had a higher incidence of microscopic portal vein invasion (mPVI), and a lower disease-free survival, and a lower overall survival than those in the GPC3-positive CTC
Summary
The aim of this study was to identify associations between the presence of GPC3-positive CTCs and clinicopathological factors of these patients, to evaluate whether CTC can predict microscopic portal vein invasion. The aim of this study was to develop a method by which to use GPC3 expression for the detection of living CTCs
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