articleClinical Cancer ResearchOct 15, 2004Closed access

Tumor Cells Circulate in the Peripheral Blood of All Major Carcinomas but not in Healthy Subjects or Patients With Nonmalignant Diseases

Eon Corporation (United States) · The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

Enumeration of spiked tumor cells was linear over the range of 5 to 1,142 cells, with an average recovery of >/=85% at each spike level. Only 1 of the 344 (0.3%) healthy and nonmalignant disease subjects had >/=2 CTCs per 7.5 mL of blood. In 2,183 blood samples from 964 metastatic carcinoma patients, CTCs ranged from 0 to 23,618 CTCs per 7.5 mL (mean, 60 +/- 693 CTCs per 7.5 mL), and 36% (781 of 2,183) of the specimens had >/=2 CTCs. Detection of >/=2 CTCs occurred at the following rates: 57% (107 of 188) of prostate cancers, 37% (489 of 1,316) of breast cancers, 37% (20 of 53) of ovarian cancers, 30% (99 of 333) of colorectal cancers, 20% (34 of 168) of lung cancers, and 26% (32 of 125) of other cancers.

Conclusions

The CellSearch system can be standardized across multiple laboratories and may be used to determine the clinical utility of CTCs. CTCs are extremely rare in healthy subjects and patients with nonmalignant diseases but present in various metastatic carcinomas with a wide range of frequencies.

Citation impact

2,500
total citations
FWCI
8.64
Percentile
100%
References
31
Citations per year

Authors

9

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Circulating tumor cell
  • Medicine
  • Internal medicine
  • Oncology
  • Prostate
  • Pathology
  • Lung
  • Colorectal cancer
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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