Epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM)-targeted capture remains the most common
isolation strategy for circulating tumor cells (CTCs). However, epithelial-to-mesenchymal
transition (EMT) leads to decreased epithelial EpCAM expression affecting the optimal CTC
capture. In this study, we tested a cohort of ovarian cancer cell lines using flow
cytometry to identify N-cadherin as the additional immunomagnetic cell surface target for
ovarian cancer cell isolation. Combined immunomagnetic targeting of mesenchymal N-cadherin
and epithelial EpCAM enriched CTCs from advanced ovarian cancer patient blood
approximately three times more efficiently than targeting of EpCAM alone. We also show
that more EMT-phenotype CTCs are captured by including N-cadherin targeting into CTC
isolation protocols. However, after N-cadherin-based CTC isolation, in some blood samples
of healthy individuals, we also observed the presence of cells expressing markers common
to CTCs. Our data show that these “false positives” can be largely distinguished from CTCs
as circulating endothelial cells (CECs) by vascular endothelial–cadherin co-staining. CEC
counts are highly variable in patients and healthy controls. Our data demonstrate that a
combination of EpCAM with N-cadherin-targeted isolation can improve CTC detection and
widen the EMT-phenotype spectrum of captured CTCs.
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