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Identification and Characterization of Circulating Tumor Cells in Men Who have Undergone Prostatectomy for Clinically Localized, High Risk Prostate Cancer

Authors :
Alise Stromlund
Joseph D. Schonhoft
Matthew S. Edwards
Stephanie B. Greene
Ryan Dittamore
Jeffry P. Simko
Peter R. Carroll
Angel Rodriquez
Yasuko Kobayashi
Karla Lindquist
Nathan Farrokhian
Mark Landers
Priscilla Ontiveros
Jeffrey Hough
Adam Jendrisak
Matthew R. Cooperberg
Jerry Lee
Terence W. Friedlander
Archana Anantharaman
Mahipal Suraneni
Yipeng Wang
Pamela L. Paris
Patricia Li
Ryon P. Graf
Sophia Sangar
Christopher J. Welty
Source :
The Journal of urology. 202(4)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Approximately 15% of men with newly diagnosed prostate cancer have high risk features which increase the risk of recurrence and metastasis. Better predictive biomarkers could allow for earlier detection of biochemical recurrence and change surveillance and adjuvant treatment paradigms. Circulating tumor cells are thought to represent the earliest form of metastases. However, their role as biomarkers in men with high risk, localized prostate cancer is not well defined.Two to 5 months after prostatectomy we obtained blood samples from 37 patients with high risk, localized prostate cancer, defined as stage T3a or higher, Gleason score 8 or greater, or prostate specific antigen 20 ng/ml or greater. Circulating tumor cells were enumerated using a commercial platform. Matched tumor and single circulating tumor cell sequencing was performed.Circulating tumor cells were detected in 30 of 37 samples (81.1%) with a median of 2.4 circulating tumor cells per ml (range 0 to 22.9). Patients with detectable circulating tumor cells showed a trend toward shorter recurrence time (p=0.12). All patients with biochemical recurrence had detectable circulating tumor cells. Androgen receptor over expression was detected in 7 of 37 patients (18.9%). Patients with biochemical recurrence had more circulating tumor cell copy number aberrations (p=0.027). Matched tumor tissue and single circulating tumor cell sequencing revealed heterogeneity.We noted a high incidence of circulating tumor cell detection after radical prostatectomy and shorter time to biochemical recurrence in men with a higher circulating tumor cell burden and more circulating tumor cell copy number aberrations. Genomic alterations consistent with established copy number aberrations in prostate cancer were detectable in circulating tumor cells but often discordant with cells analyzed in bulk from primary lesions. With further testing in appropriately powered cohorts early circulating tumor cell detection could be an informative biomarker to assist with adjuvant treatment decisions.

Details

ISSN :
15273792
Volume :
202
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e65794470cd3dbdbe1c22f6bcb73e805