International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2020)

A Pilot Study of the Predictive Potential of Chemosensitivity and Gene Expression Assays Using Circulating Tumour Cells from Patients with Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

  • Stefano Guadagni,
  • Marco Clementi,
  • Francesco Masedu,
  • Giammaria Fiorentini,
  • Donatella Sarti,
  • Marcello Deraco,
  • Shigeki Kusamura,
  • Ioannis Papasotiriou,
  • Panagiotis Apostolou,
  • Karl Reinhard Aigner,
  • Giuseppe Zavattieri,
  • Antonietta Rossella Farina,
  • Giuseppe Vizzielli,
  • Giovanni Scambia,
  • Andrew Reay Mackay

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21134813
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 13
p. 4813

Abstract

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Circulating tumour cells (CTCs) from liquid biopsies are under current investigation in several cancers, including epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) but face significant drawbacks in terms of non-standardised methodology, low viable cell numbers and accuracy of CTC identification. In this pilot study, we report that chemosensitivity assays using liquid biopsy-derived metastatic EOC CTCs, from 10 patients, nine with stage IIIC and one with stage IV disease, in progression after systemic chemotherapy, submitted for hypoxic isolated abdominal perfusion (HAP), are both feasible and useful in predicting response to therapy. Viable metastatic EOC CTCs (>5 cells/mL for all 10 blood samples), enriched by transient culture and identified by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and indirect immunofluorescence (IF), were subjected to flow cytometry-based Annexin V-PE assays for chemosensitivity to several chemotherapeutic agents and by RT-PCR for tumour gene expression profiling. Using a cut-off value of >80% cell death, CTC chemosensitivity tests were predictive of patient RECIST 1.1 responses to HAP therapy associated with 100% sensitivity, 50% specificity, 33% positive predictive, 100% negative predictive and 60% accuracy values. We propose that the methodology employed in this study is feasible and has the potential to predict response to therapy, setting the stage for a larger study.

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