Abstract

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs), defined as tumor cells circulating in the peripheral blood of patients with solid tumors, are relatively rare. Diagnosis using CTCs is expected to help in the decision-making for precision cancer medicine. We have developed an automated microcavity array (MCA) system to detect CTCs based on the differences in size and deformability between tumor cells and normal blood cells. Herein, we evaluated the system using blood samples from non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) patients. To evaluate the recovery of CTCs, preclinical experiments were performed by spiking NSCLC cell lines (NCI-H820, A549, NCI-H23 and NCI-H441) into peripheral whole blood samples from healthy volunteers. The recovery rates were 70% or more in all cell lines. For clinical evaluation, 6 mL of peripheral blood was collected from 50 patients with advanced lung cancer and from 10 healthy donors. Cells recovered on the filter were stained. We defined CTCs as DAPI-positive, cytokeratin-positive, and CD45-negative cells under the fluorescence microscope. The 50 lung cancer patients had a median age of 72 years (range, 48–85 years); 76% had NSCLC and 20% had SCLC, and 14% were at stage III disease whereas 86% were at stage IV. One or more CTCs were detected in 80% of the lung cancer patients (median 2.5). A comparison of the CellSearch system with our MCA system, using the samples from NSCLC patients, confirmed the superiority of our system (median CTC count, 0 versus 11 for CellSearch versus MCA; p = 0.0001, n = 17). The study results suggest that our MCA system has good clinical potential for diagnosing CTCs in lung cancer.

Highlights

  • We confirmed that the microcavity array (MCA) system was superior to the CellSearch system in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients

  • These results suggest that Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can be potentially used for lung cancer management in the era of precision medicine, thanks to the improved sensitivity of the MCA system

  • The CellSearch system was applied as the diagnostic tool, which works for breast and prostate cancers

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Summary

Introduction

The EpCAM expression-based system seemed to work well for small-cell lung cancers (SCLCs) in previous reports [17,18] but not as well for NSCLCs [6]. We developed a novel system, the microcavity array (MCA), which does not rely on EpCAM expression and allows the detection of CTCs based on the differences in size and deformability between tumor cells and normal blood cells.

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