1. Circulating tumor cells: silent predictors of metastasis [version 1; referees: 2 approved]
- Author
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LanLan Zhou, David T. Dicker, Elizabeth Matthew, Wafik S. El-Deiry, and R. Katherine Alpaugh
- Subjects
Review ,Articles ,Breast Diseases: Benign & Malignant ,Cancer Therapeutics ,Cell Growth & Division ,Gastrointestinal Cancers ,Genitourinary Cancers ,Genomics ,Lung Cancer ,Medical Genetics ,CTC ,Circulating Tumour Cells ,Isolation Technique ,Immunophenotyping ,Oncology - Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) were added to the arsenal of clinical testing in 2004 for three cancer types: metastatic breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer. CTCs were found to be an independent prognostic indicator of survival for these three diseases. Multiple enrichment/isolation strategies have been developed and numerous assay applications have been performed using both single and pooled captured/enriched CTCs. We have reviewed the isolation techniques and touched on many analyses. The true utility of a CTC is that it acts as a “silent” predictor of metastatic disease. The mere presence of a single CTC is an indication that disease has spread from the primary site. Comments and suggestions have been set forth for CTCs and cell-free DNA to be used as a screening panel for the early detection of disease recurrence and metastatic spread, providing the opportunity for early intervention with curative intent to treat metastatic disease.
- Published
- 2017
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