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Circulating Tumor Cells Predict Occult Metastatic Disease and Prognosis in Pancreatic Cancer
by
Tseng, Hsian-Rong
, Court, Colin M
, Hou, Shuang
, Agopian, Vatche G
, Graeber, Thomas G
, Ankeny, Jacob S
, Song, Min
, Wainberg, Zev A
, Tomlinson, James S
, Shonan Sho
, Winograd, Paul
, Girgis, Mark D
in
Biomarkers
/ Enumeration
/ Medical prognosis
/ Metastases
/ Metastasis
/ Microfluidics
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Pancreatic cancer
/ Surgery
/ Tumor cells
/ Tumors
2018
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Circulating Tumor Cells Predict Occult Metastatic Disease and Prognosis in Pancreatic Cancer
by
Tseng, Hsian-Rong
, Court, Colin M
, Hou, Shuang
, Agopian, Vatche G
, Graeber, Thomas G
, Ankeny, Jacob S
, Song, Min
, Wainberg, Zev A
, Tomlinson, James S
, Shonan Sho
, Winograd, Paul
, Girgis, Mark D
in
Biomarkers
/ Enumeration
/ Medical prognosis
/ Metastases
/ Metastasis
/ Microfluidics
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Pancreatic cancer
/ Surgery
/ Tumor cells
/ Tumors
2018
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
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Circulating Tumor Cells Predict Occult Metastatic Disease and Prognosis in Pancreatic Cancer
by
Tseng, Hsian-Rong
, Court, Colin M
, Hou, Shuang
, Agopian, Vatche G
, Graeber, Thomas G
, Ankeny, Jacob S
, Song, Min
, Wainberg, Zev A
, Tomlinson, James S
, Shonan Sho
, Winograd, Paul
, Girgis, Mark D
in
Biomarkers
/ Enumeration
/ Medical prognosis
/ Metastases
/ Metastasis
/ Microfluidics
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Pancreatic cancer
/ Surgery
/ Tumor cells
/ Tumors
2018
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Circulating Tumor Cells Predict Occult Metastatic Disease and Prognosis in Pancreatic Cancer
Journal Article
Circulating Tumor Cells Predict Occult Metastatic Disease and Prognosis in Pancreatic Cancer
2018
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Overview
BackgroundOccult metastatic tumors, below imaging thresholds, are a limitation of staging systems that rely on cross-sectional imaging alone and are a cause of the routine understaging of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDACs). We investigated circulating tumor cells (CTCs) as a preoperative predictor of occult metastatic disease and as a prognostic biomarker for PDAC patients.Experimental DesignA total of 126 patients (100 with cancer, 26 with benign disease) were enrolled in our study and CTCs were identified and enumerated from 4 mL of venous blood using the microfluidic NanoVelcro assay. CTC enumeration was correlated with clinicopathologic variables and outcomes following both surgical and systemic therapies.ResultsCTCs were identified in 78% of PDAC patients and CTC counts correlated with increasing stage (ρ = 0.42, p < 0.001). Of the 53 patients taken for potentially curative surgery, 13 (24.5%) had occult metastatic disease intraoperatively. Patients with occult disease had significantly more CTCs than patients with local disease only (median 7 vs. 1 CTC, p < 0.0001). At a cut-off of three or more CTCs/4 mL, CTCs correctly identified patients with occult metastatic disease preoperatively (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.82, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.76–0.98, p < 0.0001). CTCs were a univariate predictor of recurrence-free survival following surgery [hazard ratio (HR) 2.36, 95% CI 1.17–4.78, p = 0.017], as well as an independent predictor of overall survival on multivariate analysis (HR 1.38, 95% CI 1.01–1.88, p = 0.040).ConclusionsCTCs show promise as a prognostic biomarker for PDAC patients at all stages of disease being treated both medically and surgically. Furthermore, CTCs demonstrate potential as a preoperative biomarker for identifying patients at high risk of occult metastatic disease.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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