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Circulating Tumor Cell Clusters in the Peripheral Blood of Colorectal Cancer Patients
Purpose: Recently several reverse transcription-PCR techniques have been proven to be useful for the detection of circulating micrometastases. However, this way intact cell clusters that were found in animal experiments of prognostic value could not be detected. In this study, evaluation and modific...
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Published in: | Clinical cancer research 2001-12, Vol.7 (12), p.4080-4085 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Purpose: Recently several reverse transcription-PCR techniques have been proven to be useful for the detection of circulating micrometastases.
However, this way intact cell clusters that were found in animal experiments of prognostic value could not be detected. In
this study, evaluation and modification of a commercial, cytokeratin-based, immunomagnetic cell separation method was performed
for the detection of intact cell clusters in colorectal carcinoma patients.
Experimental Design: Thirty-two colon cancer patients (6 were in Dukes stage B, 13 in stage C, and 13 in stage D) and 20 healthy donor samples
were evaluated. Immunomagnetic cell separation was performed from the buffy coat of peripheral blood samples (20 ml) using
the Carcinoma Cell Enrichment Kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany), avoiding any filtering steps. The enriched
cell fraction was cytocentrifuged and immunocytochemically labeled using a pancytokeratin antibody (MNF116; Dako).
Results: Of 20 healthy samples, 2 contained one cytokeratin-positive cell. Of 32 single samples from malignant cases, 24 showed cytokeratin-positive
cells. Tumor cell clusters, mixed-cell doublets (one cytokeratin-positive and -negative cell), and mixed-cell clusters were
detected in 22 of 24 patients. In six cases, cytokeratin-positive dendritic-like cells were detected. Follow-up data indicate
that chemotherapy cannot destroy all of the circulating tumor cell clusters.
Conclusions: Using the methods presented, we could detect circulating colon cancer cells and cell clusters in colon carcinoma patients.
Similar cellular structures were described previously only in rats. Present data prove that such structures are present in
human colorectal cancer, too. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |