2020
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics10030144
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Circulating Tumor Cells as a Tool of Minimal Residual Disease Can Predict Lung Cancer Recurrence: A longitudinal, Prospective Trial

Abstract: Background: The role of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) for predicting the recurrence of cancer in lung cancer patients after surgery remains unclear. Methods: A negatively selected protocol of CTC identification was applied. For all the enrolled patients, CTC testing was performed before and after surgery on the operation day (day 0), postoperative day 1, and day 3. The daily decline and trend of CTCs were analyzed to correlate with cancer relapse. The mixed model repeated measures (MMRM) adjusted by cancer ch… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Increased CTCs in PV were reported to associate with patients' poor prognosis [103,105]. Similar to association of post-surgical hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) CTCs with cancer relapse [38], detection of CTCs in PV during operation or in post-surgical peripheral blood also enables early detection of lung cancer recurrence, particularly in the post-resected lung cancer patients [37,[106][107][108].…”
Section: Quantificationmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Increased CTCs in PV were reported to associate with patients' poor prognosis [103,105]. Similar to association of post-surgical hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) CTCs with cancer relapse [38], detection of CTCs in PV during operation or in post-surgical peripheral blood also enables early detection of lung cancer recurrence, particularly in the post-resected lung cancer patients [37,[106][107][108].…”
Section: Quantificationmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…However, blood samples are the ones most commonly utilized. The determination of biomarkers in liquid biopsy is useful in early diagnosis of lung cancer [ 64 , 65 ], in monitoring patients and genetic alterations during therapy [ 63 , 66 ], in characterizing molecular tumor profile [ 66 , 67 ], in assessing prognosis [ 68 ] and in detecting minimal residual disease in early stage lung cancer after curative resection [ 69 ]. Regarding the latter, Wu et al determined the circulating tumor cell count before and after resection on the day of surgery, and on postoperative days 1 and 3 in 41 patients with lung cancer, 30 (80%) adenocarcinomas.…”
Section: Potential Future Refinementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding the latter, Wu et al determined the circulating tumor cell count before and after resection on the day of surgery, and on postoperative days 1 and 3 in 41 patients with lung cancer, 30 (80%) adenocarcinomas. The count dropped on postoperative day 1, but a rise in count on day 3 in 11 patients was associated with recurrence [ 69 ]. Chaudhuri et al determined circulating tumor DNA in 40 patients before and after intended curative treatment with radiotherapy, chemotherapy and/or surgery for stage I to III lung cancer.…”
Section: Potential Future Refinementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…53 The CTC count has been proven to be a promising biomarker for the diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring of therapeutic response in lung cancer. [54][55][56] The biggest challenge for CTC application in the early detection of cancer is the enrichment of very few CTC cells, which usually exist as single tumor cell in the context of millions of blood cells. 57 The smaller the size of the lesion, the lower the amount of CTCs in the blood, thereby causing low diagnostic sensitivity of CTCs for malignant SPNs.…”
Section: Circulating Tumor Cells (Ctcs)mentioning
confidence: 99%