Scientific Reports (Dec 2022)

Molecular subtype conversion in CTCs as indicator of treatment adequacy associated with metastasis-free survival in breast cancer

  • E. S. Grigoryeva,
  • L. A.Tashireva,
  • V. V. Alifanov,
  • O. E. Savelieva,
  • S. V. Vtorushin,
  • M. V. Zavyalova,
  • O. D. Bragina,
  • E. Y. Garbukov,
  • N. V. Cherdyntseva,
  • E. L. Choinzonov,
  • V. M. Perelmuter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-25609-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Molecular subtype of breast cancer has a great clinical significance and used as one of the major criteria for therapeutic strategy. Recently, for anticancer therapy, the trend for oncologists is the predominant determination of biomarkers in the existing foci of the disease. In the case of adjuvant therapy prescribed for distant metastases prevention, CTCs could be a suitable object for investigation. CTCs as one of the factors responsible for tumor metastatic potential could be more convenient and informative for evaluation of hormone receptors, Ki-67 and HER2 expression, which are determine molecular subtype in breast cancer patient. In our study, we aimed to investigate the molecular subtype discordance between the primary tumor and CTCs in breast cancer patients. We established conversion of molecular subtype in most of the cases. Namely, conversion was detected in 90% of untreated patients and in 82% of breast cancer patients treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy. At the same time, molecular subtype conversions in patients treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy were more diverse. Molecular subtype conversions resulted more often in the unfavorable variants in circulating tumor cells. We stratified all patients according to the adequacy of treatment against converted CTCs molecular subtype. Our study revealed that good response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy observed in case of adequate therapy, namely, when chemotherapy scheme was sufficient against CTCs. It turned out that patients with inadequate therapy were characterized by decreased simulated 5-year metastasis-free survival compared to patients who received appropriate therapy. Thus, detection of molecular subtype conversion in circulating tumor cells could be a perspective tool for optimization of antitumor therapy.