Abstract

BackgroundTumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs) and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood of metastatic cancer patients associate with poor outcomes. In this study, we explored the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) expression on CTCs and tdEVs of metastatic breast cancer patients.MethodsBlood samples from 98 patients (CLCC-IC-2006-04 study) were originally processed with the CellSearch® system using the CTC kit and anti-HER2 as an additional marker in the staining cocktail. CTCs and tdEVs were automatically enumerated from the generated CellSearch images using the open-source ACCEPT software.ResultsCTCs and tdEVs were subdivided based on their cytokeratin (CK) and HER2 phenotype into CK+HER2−, CK−HER2+, and CK+HER2+. The inclusion of anti-HER2 increased the percentage of informative samples with ≥ 1 detectable CTC from 89 to 95%. CK− CTCs and tdEVs correlated equally well with the clinical outcome as CK+ CTCs and tdEVs. Inter- and intra-patient heterogeneity was found for the CTC/tdEV phenotypes, and the presence of 2 or 3 classes of CTCs/tdEVs was associated with worse prognosis compared to a uniform CTC/tdEV phenotype present (1 class). The use of ≥ 7% HER2+CK+ tdEVs can predict HER2 expression of the tissue with 74% sensitivity and specificity using the HER2 amplification status of the primary tumor as a classification variable.ConclusionsHER2 can be detected on CTCs and tdEVs not expressing CK, and these CK− CTCs/tdEVs have similar clinical relevance to CTCs and tdEVs expressing CK. tdEVs perform better than CTCs in predicting the HER2 status of the primary tissue. CTC and tdEV heterogeneity in the blood of patients is inversely associated with overall survival.

Highlights

  • Tumor-derived extracellular vesicles and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood of metastatic cancer patients associate with poor outcomes

  • There was no significant difference in regard to the probability distribution for overall survival (OS) (p = 0.863, log-rank test) and the distributions for the manual CTC counts (p = 0.600, Mann-Whitney U test) between the complete patient cohort and the patient subpopulation included in the present analysis

  • Our previously reported Tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs) definition enclosed all events isolated with the CellSearch system that were positive for CK and negative for CD45, without a nucleus and with a size range between 1 and 14 μm [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (tdEVs) and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood of metastatic cancer patients associate with poor outcomes. The possibility of longitudinal measurements and the screening of CTCs for therapeutic targets can provide clinicians with the mutational status of the tumor and the presence of treatment targets in real-time facilitating their decisions on treatment monitoring [3, 4]. The reliability of such an assessment increases with the number of CTCs available. In metastatic breast cancer, ~ 50% of patients have ≥ 5 CTCs detected with the CellSearch system and the percentage of patients with ≥ 10 and ≥ 100 CTCs decreases rapidly [1]

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