Evaluation of circulating tumor cell clusters for pan-cancer noninvasive diagnostic triaging.
Gaya A,Crook T,Plowman N,Ranade A,Limaye S,Bhatt A,Page R,Patil R,Fulmali P,Datta V,Kumar P,Patil D,Akolkar D
Abstract
Histopathologic examination (HPE) of tumor tissue obtained by invasive biopsy is the standard for cancer diagnosis but is resource-intensive and has been associated with procedural risks. The authors demonstrate that immunocytochemistry (ICC) profiling of circulating ensembles of tumor-associated cells (C-ETACs) can noninvasively provide diagnostic guidance in solid organ cancers.
The clinical performance of this approach was tested on blood samples from 30,060 individuals, including 9416 individuals with known cancer; 6725 symptomatic individuals with suspected cancer; and 13,919 asymptomatic individuals with no prior diagnosis of cancer. C-ETACs were harvested from peripheral blood and profiled by ICC for organ-specific and subtype-specific markers relevant to the cancer type. ICC profiles were compared with HPE diagnoses to determine concordance.
The presence of malignancy was confirmed by the detection of C-ETACs in 91.8% of the 9416 individuals with previously known cancer. Of the 6725 symptomatic individuals, 6025 were diagnosed with cancer, and 700 were diagnosed with benign conditions; C-ETACs were detected in 92.6% of samples from the 6025 individuals with cancer. In a subset of 3509 samples, ICC profiling of C-ETACs for organ-specific and subtype-specific markers was concordant with HPE findings in 93.1% of cases. C-ETACs were undetectable in 95% of samples from the 700 symptomatic individuals who had benign conditions and in 96.3% of samples from the 13,919 asymptomatic individuals.
C-ETACs were ubiquitous (>90%) in various cancers and provided diagnostically relevant information in the majority (>90%) of cases. This is the first comprehensive report on the feasibility of ICC profiling of C-ETACs to provide pan-cancer diagnostic guidance with accuracy comparable to that of HPE.
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