Cancers (Oct 2021)

Clinical Significance of Plasma CD9-Positive Exosomes in HIV Seronegative and Seropositive Lung Cancer Patients

  • Foteinos-Ioannis Dimitrakopoulos,
  • Anastasia E. Kottorou,
  • Kristen Rodgers,
  • John Timothy Sherwood,
  • Georgia-Angeliki Koliou,
  • Beverly Lee,
  • Andrew Yang,
  • Julie Renee Brahmer,
  • Stephen B. Baylin,
  • Stephen C. Yang,
  • Hajime Orita,
  • Alicia Hulbert,
  • Malcolm V. Brock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13205193
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 20
p. 5193

Abstract

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Recently, the role of exosomes in the progression of both cancer and HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) has been described. This study investigates the clinical significance of CD9-positive plasma exosomes in lung cancer patients, healthy individuals, and HIV-positive patients with or without lung cancer. Using a verified with transmission electron microscopy double-sandwich ELISA technique, plasma-derived exosomes were isolated and quantified from 210 lung cancer patients (including 44 metastatic patients with progressive disease after chemotherapy), 49 healthy controls, 20 patients with pulmonary granulomas, 19 HIV+ patients with lung cancer, 31 HIV+ patients without cancer, and 3 HIV+ patients with pulmonary granulomas. Plasma exosome concentrations differed between healthy controls, patients with immunocompetent pulmonary granulomas and patients with lung cancer even after chemotherapy (p p p = 0.016). Although exosome concentrations differed between all different lung cancer histologies and healthy controls (p p p p = 0.044), and multivariate analysis (p = 0.040) with a better 3-year survival in stage II and III NSCLC (Non-small-cell lung carcinoma) patients. In conclusion, our study shows that CD9-positive plasma exosomes are associated with both lung cancer and HIV, prior chemotherapy, as well as with survival, suggesting a possible prognostic value.

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