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T. Sawada



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    P3.06 - Poster Session 3 - Prognostic and Predictive Biomarkers (ID 178)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Poster Session
    • Track: Biology
    • Presentations: 1
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      P3.06-007 - Clinical feasibility study of a novel sorting system for detecting EGFR mutations from captured circulating tumor cells in patients with lung cancer (ID 1046)

      09:30 - 09:30  |  Author(s): T. Sawada

      • Abstract

      Background
      Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cells that originate from a primary solid tumor and are found transiting the circulatory system. CTCs are expected to provide useful clinical information on biology of their primary, as ”liquid biopsy.” We have developed a novel cell-sorting system equipped with a disposable microfluidic chip (On-chip Sort, On-Chip Biotechnologies, Tokyo, JAPAN). At American Association for Cancer Reseach meeting 2013, we previously reported about its CTCs enumeration capability when performed in a clinical setting. Currently, On-chip Sort enables recovery of more CTCs than conventional cell sorting systems for further characterization.

      Methods
      In a preclinical study, PC-9 and H1975 human lung cancer cells harboring EGFR mutations (E746_A750del and L858R, T790M, respectively) were spiked into the blood from healthy donors. After samples were negatively enriched using anti-CD45-coated magnetic beads, the spiked cancer cells in the samples were captured by On-chip Sort. The captured tumor cells were subjected to mutation detection by ARMS/Scorpion PCR assay. A clinical feasibility study was then conducted in lung cancer patients harboring EGFR mutations.

      Results
      On-chip Sort performed recovery of the spiked PC-9 and H1975 cancer cells (5 cells in 4 ml of blood) in a preclinical experiment. Successively, we were able to detect the EGFR mutations from the captured cells. In a clinical feasibility study, 4 blood samples from lung cancer patients harboring EGFR mutation were collected and were evaluated. All the samples were successful in capturing CTCs by On-chip Sort. ARMS/Scorpion PCR assay detected the EGFR deletion mutation from two of the samples (50%).

      Conclusion
      The preclinical study and the results of the clinical feasibility study suggested the possibility of the On-chip Sort assay to detect EGFR mutations from peripheral blood of patients with lung cancer. Further investigation is going to be conducted to evaluate the correlation of EGFR mutations in captured CTCs and primary lesions.