Abstract

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) have been shown to be heterogeneous. Focusing on the epithelial-mesenchymal transition and perioperative kinetics, we evaluated CTCs with mesenchymal phenotypes as a potential prognostic biomarker for patients with gastric cancer. Peripheral blood was collected from 54 patients with gastric cancer before surgery and at 1week and 1month after surgery. CTCs were enriched using density-gradient centrifugation and magnetic-activated cell sorting (negative selection). Cell suspensions were characterized by multi-immunofluorescence staining against cytokeratin and N-cadherin, and by 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenyldole staining. CTCs were detected in five patients (17%) with early cancer and 14 patients (56%) with advanced cancer (p < 0.05). In our system, N-cadherin, but not cytokeratin, was expressed in the CTCs of 90% (19/21) of patients. Postoperative recurrence was detected in 10 patients, all of whom had N-cadherin+/cytokeratin-/CD45- CTCs preoperatively. Regarding perioperative kinetics, we divided patients into three risk groups: a high-risk group, with one or more preoperative CTCs and increased CTCs postoperatively; an intermediate-risk group, with one or more preoperative CTCs and decreased CTCs postoperatively; and a low-risk group, with no preoperative CTCs. Recurrence rates were 57% (4/7), 33% (4/12), and 6% (2/35), respectively. The relapse-free survival rate was lower in patients at high risk versus those at intermediate or low risk, for all patients (p = 0.00024) and in patients with advanced cancer (p = 0.00103). N-cadherin is a highly useful marker to detect CTCs lacking cytokeratin, and the perioperative kinetics of CTC numbers is beneficial in risk stratification for survival in patients with gastric cancer.

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