EBioMedicine (Sep 2018)

Circulating tumor cells detection in neuroblastoma patients by EpCAM-independent enrichment and immunostaining-fluorescence in situ hybridizationResearch in context

  • Xiangqi Liu,
  • Zhenzhen Zhang,
  • Binbin Zhang,
  • Yijie Zheng,
  • Chao Zheng,
  • Baihui Liu,
  • Shan Zheng,
  • Kuiran Dong,
  • Rui Dong

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35
pp. 244 – 250

Abstract

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Detecting circulating tumor cells (CTCs) has proven valuable for evaluating the prognosis of cancer patients and for studying the mechanisms of treatment resistance. Owing to the lack of universal and specific tumor markers for neuroblastoma (NB), in this prospective study, we adopted an EpCAM-independent method to detect CTCs in the peripheral blood of NB patients.We used an EpCAM-independent assay to delete leukocytes and to enrich the CTCs. CTCs were identified by immunostaining of CD45, DAPI and DNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) of the centromere of chromosome 8 probe (CEP8). Cells that were DAPI+/CD45-/CEP8 ≥ 3 were considered CTCs. We collected peripheral blood from 28 NB patients as well as clinical and follow-up data.The number of CTCs among the different risk groups were significantly different (p = .0208, Kruskal–Wallis test). Patients with metastasis had more CTCs than those without metastasis (p < .0001, Mann–Whitney test). Patients with ≥3 CTCs per 4 ml of peripheral blood had an increased likelihood of having metastasis (sensitivity, 88.89%; specificity, 78.59%), and patients with ≥10 CTCs per 4 ml of peripheral blood had poorer overall survival.The EpCAM-independent assay along with immunostaining-FISH (i-FISH) described here can detect CTCs in patients with NB at a high sensitivity and may have clinical value for prognosis evaluation and diagnosing metastasis when imaging data are ambiguous. Keywords: Circulating tumor cells, Neuroblastoma, Prognosis, Metastasis