Abstract

BackgroundThe existence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in patients with lung cancer has been reported. The purpose of this study was to assess whether CTCs are predictive of the pathological effects of induction chemoradiotherapy for patients with non-small cell lung cancer.MethodsPatients who underwent induction chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery were compared with those who underwent surgery alone. Peripheral and pulmonary venous blood samples from the involved lobe were collected intraoperatively, and the number of CTCs was counted using the CellSearch™ system, an epithelial cell adhesion molecule-based immunomagnetic technique.ResultsOf the 9 patients who underwent induction therapy, 4 achieved pathological CR, 4 achieved major response, and 1 achieved minor response. All patients who underwent induction therapy and surgery alone were negative for CTCs in peripheral blood. In the induction therapy group, 4 patients showing pathological CR were negative for CTCs in pulmonary venous blood (pvCTCs) and 5 showing major/minor response were positive (mean, 57.8 cells). The numbers of CTCs in patients showing major/minor response were significantly higher than those in patients showing pathological CR (p = 0.012, Mann–Whitney U test). All 6 patients undergoing surgery alone were positive for pvCTCs (mean, 207.5 cells), showing a significant difference from those undergoing induction therapy (p = 0.038).ConclusionsThe existence of CTCs in pulmonary venous blood reflects pathological non-CR, and therapeutic pathological response may be predicted by pvCTC measurement.

Highlights

  • The existence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in patients with lung cancer has been reported

  • Induction chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains controversial, but a favorable prognosis was reported in patients who achieved pathological complete response (CR) [6]

  • No CTCs in pulmonary venous blood (pvCTCs) were found in the group showing pathological CR

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Summary

Introduction

The existence of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in patients with lung cancer has been reported. The purpose of this study was to assess whether CTCs are predictive of the pathological effects of induction chemoradiotherapy for patients with non-small cell lung cancer. The detection rate of CTCs was very low in the peripheral blood of lung cancer patients with no clinically detectable distant metastasis [14,15,16], it was higher in pulmonary venous blood [17]. Since pathological CR is defined as a condition in which no pathologically viable tumor cells remain [18], we hypothesized that CTCs are undetectable in patients achieving CR, even in pulmonary venous blood. The purpose of this study was to assess whether CTCs are predictive of pathological response to induction chemoradiotherapy. We counted the number of CTCs in pulmonary venous blood (pvCTCs) and peripheral blood (periCTCs) and examined their relationship with pathological response

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