Translational Oncology (Nov 2019)

CD63-GPC1-Positive Exosomes Coupled with CA19-9 Offer Good Diagnostic Potential for Resectable Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

  • Etienne Buscail,
  • Alexandre Chauvet,
  • Pascaline Quincy,
  • Olivier Degrandi,
  • Camille Buscail,
  • Isabelle Lamrissi,
  • Isabelle Moranvillier,
  • Charline Caumont,
  • Severine Verdon,
  • Alain Brisson,
  • Marion Marty,
  • Laurence Chiche,
  • Christophe Laurent,
  • Veronique Vendrely,
  • François Moreau-Gaudry,
  • Aurelie Bedel,
  • Sandrine Dabernat

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
pp. 1395 – 1403

Abstract

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Tumor-released extracellular vesicles (EVs) contain tumor-specific cargo distinguishing them from healthy EVs, and making them eligible as circulating biomarkers. Glypican 1 (GPC1)-positive exosome relevance as liquid biopsy elements is still debated. We carried out a prospective study to quantify GPC1-positive exosomes in sera from pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patients undergoing up-front surgery, as compared to controls including patients without cancer history and patients displaying pancreatic preneoplasic lesions. Sera were enriched in EVs, and exosomes were pulled down with anti-CD63 coupled magnetic beads. GPC1-positive bead percentages determined by flow cytometry were significantly higher in PDAC than in the control group. Diagnosis accuracy reached 78% (sensitivity 64% and specificity 90%), when results from peripheral and portal blood were combined. In association with echo-guided-ultrasound-fine-needle-aspiration (EUS-FNA) negative predictive value was 80% as compared to 33% for EUS-FNA only. This approach is clinically relevant as a companion test to the already available diagnostic tools, since patients with GPC1-positive exosomes in peripheral blood showed decreased tumor free survival.