Back to Search Start Over

Circulating tumor cells for comprehensive and multiregional non-invasive genetic characterization of multiple myeloma

Authors :
Juan Flores-Montero
Juan José Garcés
Xabier Agirre
Idoia Rodriguez
Rafael Del Orbe
Bruno Paiva
Paula Rodriguez-Otero
Felipe Prosper
Pethema
Maria-Victoria Mateos
Halima El Omri
Luzalba Sanoja-Flores
Rafael Valdés-Mas
Sara Rodriguez
Alberto Orfao
Joan Bladé
Miguel-García Álvarez
Jesús F. San Miguel
Noemi Puig
Laura Rosiñol
Luis Palomera
Carlos López-Otín
Albert Pérez-Montaña
Juan José Lahuerta
Maria-Teresa Cedena
Joaquin Martinez-Lopez
Rafael Rios
Leire Burgos
Gabriel Bretones
Maria-Jose Calasanz
Diego Alignani
Diana A. Puente
Pamela Millacoy
Ibai Goicoechea
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red Cáncer (España)
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Cancer Research UK
Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer
European Commission
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Research Council
International Myeloma Foundation
Qatar National Research Fund
Leukemia Research Foundation
Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, Leukemia
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2020.

Abstract

Multiple myeloma (MM) patients undergo repetitive bone marrow (BM) aspirates for genetic characterization. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are detectable in peripheral blood (PB) of virtually all MM cases and are prognostic, but their applicability for noninvasive screening has been poorly investigated. Here, we used next-generation flow (NGF) cytometry to isolate matched CTCs and BM tumor cells from 53 patients and compared their genetic profile. In eight cases, tumor cells from extramedullary (EM) plasmacytomas were also sorted and whole-exome sequencing was performed in the three spatially distributed tumor samples. CTCs were detectable by NGF in the PB of all patients with MM. Based on the cancer cell fraction of clonal and subclonal mutations, we found that ~22% of CTCs egressed from a BM (or EM) site distant from the matched BM aspirate. Concordance between BM tumor cells and CTCs was high for chromosome arm-level copy number alterations (≥95%) though not for translocations (39%). All high-risk genetic abnormalities except one t(4;14) were detected in CTCs whenever present in BM tumor cells. Noteworthy, ≥82% mutations present in BM and EM clones were detectable in CTCs. Altogether, these results support CTCs for noninvasive risk-stratification of MM patients based on their numbers and genetic profile.<br />This study was supported by the Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red—Área de Oncología—del Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CIBERONC; CB16/12/00236, CB16/12/00369, CB16/12/00489, and CB16/12/00400); by Cancer Research UK [C355/A26819] and FC AECC and AIRC under the Accelerator Award Program; by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, FCAECC and co-financed by FEDER (ERANET-TRANSCAN-2 iMMunocell AC17/00101); the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and co-financed by FSE (Torres Quevedo fellowship, PTQ-16-08623); the Black Swan Research Initiative of the International Myeloma Foundation; European Research Council (ERC) under the European Commission’s H2020 Framework Programme (MYELOMANEXT, 680200); the Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) Award No. 7-916-3-237; the AACR-Millennium Fellowship in Multiple Myeloma Research (15-40-38-PAIV); the Leukemia Research Foundation; and the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF) under the 2019 Research Fellowship Award.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, Leukemia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....436d2d1cf66409ba66adc37fef5a526c