1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to cancer prognosis and survival in metastatic cancer patients, based on the presence of morphologically intact circulating cancer cells (CTC) in blood. More specifically, diagnostic methods, reagents and apparatus are described that correlate the presence of circulating cancer cells in 7.5 ml of blood of metastatic breast cancer patients with time to disease progression and survivability. Circulating tumor cells are determined by highly sensitive methodologies capable of isolating and imaging 1 or 2 cancer cells in approximately 5 to 50 ml of peripheral blood, the level of the tumor cell number and an increase in tumor cell number during treatment are correlated to the time to progression, time to death and response to therapy.
2. Background Art
Despite efforts to improve treatment and management of cancer patients, survival in cancer patients has not improved over the past two decades for many cancer types. Accordingly, most cancer patients are not killed by their primary tumor, but they succumb instead to metastases: multiple widespread tumor colonies established by malignant cells that detach themselves from the original tumor and travel through the body, often to distant sites. The most successful therapeutic strategy in cancer is early detection and surgical removal of the tumor while still organ confined. Early detection of cancer has proven feasible for some cancers, particularly where appropriate diagnostic tests exist such as PAP smears in cervical cancer, mammography in breast cancer, and serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) in prostate cancer. However, many cancers detected at early stages have established micrometastases prior to surgical resection. Thus, early and accurate determination of the cancer's malignant potential is important for selection of proper therapy.
Optimal therapy will be based on a combination of diagnostic and prognostic information. An accurate and reproducible diagnostic test is needed to provide specific information regarding the metastatic nature of a particular cancer, together with a prognostic assessment that will provide specific information regarding survival.
A properly designed prognostic test will give physicians information about risk and likelihood of survival, which in turn gives the patient the benefit of not having to endure unnecessary treatment. Patient morale would also be boosted from the knowledge that a selected therapy will be effective based on a prognostic test. The cost savings associated with such a test could be significant as the physician would be provided with a rationale for replacing ineffective therapies. A properly developed diagnostic and prognostic data bank in the treatment and detection of metastatic cancer focusing on survival obviously would provide an enormous benefit to medicine (U.S. Pat. No. 6,063,586).
If a primary tumor is detected early enough, it can often be eliminated by surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy or some combination of those treatments. Unfortunately, the metastatic colonies are difficult to detect and eliminate and it is often impossible to treat all of them successfully. Therefore from a clinical point of view, metastasis can be considered the conclusive event in the natural progression of cancer. Moreover, the ability to metastasize is a property that uniquely characterizes a malignant tumor.
Based on the complexity of cancer and cancer metastasis and the frustration in treating cancer patients over the years, many attempts have been made to develop diagnostic tests to guide treatment and monitor the effects of such treatment on metastasis or relapse.
One of the first attempts to develop a useful test for diagnostic oncology was the formulation of an immunoassay for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). This antigen appears on fetal cells and reappears on tumor cells in certain cancers. Extensive efforts have been made to evaluate the usefulness of testing for CEA as well as many other “tumor” antigens, such as prostate specific antigen (PSA), CA 15.3, CA 125, prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), CA 27.29, p27 found in either tissue samples or blood as soluble cellular debris. These and other debris antigens are thought to be derived from destruction of both circulating and non-circulating tumor cells, and thus their presence may not always reflect metastatic potential, especially if the cells rupture while in an apoptotic state.
Additional tests used to predict tumor progression in cancer patients have focused upon correlating enzymatic indices like telomerase activity in biopsy-harvested tumor samples with an indication of an unfavorable or favorable prognosis (U.S. Pat. No. 5,693,474; U.S. Pat. No. 5,639,613). Assessing enzyme activity in this type of analysis can involve time-consuming laboratory procedures such as gel electrophoresis and Western blot analysis. Also, there are variations in the signal to noise and sensitivity in sample analysis based on the origin of the tumor. Despite these shortcomings, specific soluble tumor markers in blood can provide a rapid and efficient approach for developing a therapeutic strategy early in treatment. For example, detection of serum HER-2/neu and serum CA 15-3 in patients with metastatic breast cancer have been shown to be prognostic factors for metastatic breast cancer (Ali S. M., Leitzel K., Chinchilli V. M., Engle L., Demers L., Harvey H. A., Carney W., Allard J. W. and Lipton A., Relationship of Serum HER-2/neu and Serum CA 15-3 in Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer, Clinical Chemistry, 48(8):1314-1320 (2002)). Increased HER-2/neu results in decreased response to hormone therapy, and is a significant prognostic factor in predicting responses to hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer. Thus in malignancies where the HER-2/neu oncogene product is associated, methods have been described to monitor therapy or assess risks based on elevated levels (U.S. Pat. No. 5,876,712). However in both cases, the base levels during remission, or even in healthy normals, are relatively high and may overlap with concentrations found in patients, thus requiring multiple testing and monitoring to establish patient-dependent baseline and cut-off levels.
In prostate cancer, PSA levels in serum have proven to be useful in early detection. When used with a follow-up physical examination (digital rectal exam) and biopsy, the PSA test has improved detection of prostate cancer at an early stage when it is best treated.
However, PSA or the related PSMA testing leaves much to be desired. For example, elevated levels of PSA weakly correlate with disease stage and appear not to be a reliable indicator of the metastatic potential of the tumor. This may be due in part to the fact that PSA is a component of normal prostate tissue and benign prostatic hyperplasia (BHP) tissue. Moreover, approximately 30% of patients with alleged localized prostate cancer and corresponding low serum PSA concentrations, may have metastatic disease (Moreno et al., Cancer Research, 52:6110 (1992)).
One approach for determining the presence of malignant prostate tumor cells has been to test for the expression of messenger RNA from PSA in blood. This is being done through the laborious procedure of isolating all of the mRNA from the blood sample and performing reverse transcriptase PCR. No significant correlation has been described between the presence of shed tumor cells in blood and the ability to identify which patients would benefit from more vigorous treatment (Gomella L G., J of Urology, 158:326-337 (1997)). Additionally, false positives are often observed using this technique. There is an added drawback, which is that there is a finite and practical limit to the sensitivity of this technique based on the sample size. Typically, the test is performed on 105 to 106 cells separated from interfering red blood cells, corresponding to a practical lower limit of sensitivity of one tumor cell/0.1 ml of blood (about 10 tumor cells in one ml of blood) before a signal is detected. Higher sensitivity has been suggested by detecting hK2 RNA in tumor cells isolated from blood (U.S. Pat. No. 6,479,263; U.S. Pat. No. 6,235,486).
Qualitative RT-PCR based studies with blood-based nucleotide markers has been used to indicate that the potential for disease-free survival for patients with positive CEA mRNA in pre-operative blood is worse than that of patients negative for CEA mRNA (Hardingham J. E., Hewett P. J., Sage R. E., Finch J. L., Nuttal J. D., Kotasel D. and Dovrovic A., Molecular detection of blood-borne epithelial cells in colorectal cancer patients and in patients with benign bowel disease, Int. J. Cancer 89:8-13 (2000): Taniguchi T., Makino M., Suzuki K., Kaibara N., Prognostic significance of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction measurement of carcinoembryonic antigen mRNA levels in tumor drainage blood and peripheral blood of patients with colorectal carcinoma, Cancer 89:970-976 (2000)). The prognostic value of this endpoint is dependent upon CEA mRNA levels, which are also induced in healthy individuals by G-CSF, cytokines, steroids, or environmental factors. Hence, the CEA mRNA marker lacks specificity and is clearly not unique to circulating colorectal cancer cells. Other reports have implicated tyrosinase mRNA in peripheral blood and bone marrow as a marker for malignant melanoma in stage II-IV patients (Ghossein R. A., Coit D., Brennan M., Zhang Z. F., Wang Y., Bhattacharya S., Houghton A., and Rosai J., Prognostic significance of peripheral blood and bone marrow tyrosinase messenger RNA in malignant melanoma, Clin Cancer Res., 4(2):419-428 (1998)). Again using tyrosinase mRNA as a soluble tumor marker is subject to the previously cited limitations of soluble tumor antigens as indicators of metastatic potential and patient survival.
The aforementioned and other studies, while seemingly prognostic under the experimental conditions, do not provide for consistent data with a long follow-up period or at a satisfactory specificity. Accordingly, these efforts have proven to be somewhat futile as the appearance of mRNA for antigens in blood have not been generally predictive for most cancers and are often detected when there is little hope for the patient.
In spite of this, real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has been the only procedure reported to correlate the quantitative detection of circulating tumor cells with patient prognosis. Real-time RT-PCR has been used for quantifying CEA mRNA in peripheral blood of colorectal cancer patients (Ito S., Nakanishi H., Hirai T., Kato T., Kodera Y., Feng Z., Kasai Y., Ito K., Akiyama S., Nakao A., and Tatematsu M., Quantitative detection of CEA expressing free tumor cells in the peripheral blood of colorectal cancer patients during surgery with real-time RT-PCR on a Light Cycler, Cancer Letters, 183:195-203 (2002)). Using Kaplan-Meier type analysis, disease free survival of patients with positive CEA mRNA in post-operative blood was significantly shorter than in cases that were negative for CEA mRNA. These results suggest that tumor cells were shed into the bloodstream (possibly during surgical procedures or from micro metastases already existing at the time of the operation), and resulted in poor patient outcomes in patients with colorectal cancer. The sensitivity of this assay provided a reproducibly detectable range similar in sensitivity to conventional RT-PCR. As mentioned, these detection ranges are based on unreliable conversions of amplified product to the number of tumor cells. The extrapolated cell count may include damaged CTC incapable of metastatic proliferation. Further, PCR-based assays are limited by possible sample contamination, along with an inability to quantify tumor cells. Most importantly, methods based on PCR, flowcytometry, cytoplasmic enzymes and circulating tumor antigens cannot provide essential morphological information confirming the structural integrity underlying metastatic potential of the presumed CTC and thus constitute functionally less reliable surrogate assays than the highly sensitive imaging methods embodied, in part, in this invention.
Detection of intact tumor cells in blood provides a direct link to recurrent metastatic disease in cancer patients who have undergone resection of their primary tumor. Unfortunately, the same spreading of malignant cells continues to be missed by conventional tumor staging procedures. Recent studies have shown that the presence of a single carcinoma cell in the bone marrow of cancer patients is an independent prognostic factor for metastatic relapse (Diel I J, Kaufman M, Goerner R, Costa S D, Kaul S, Bastert G. Detection of tumor cells in bone marrow of patients with primary breast cancer: a prognostic factor for distant metastasis. J Clin Oncol, 10:1534-1539, 1992). But these invasive techniques are deemed undesirable or unacceptable for routine or multiple clinical assays compared to detection of disseminated epithelial tumor cells in blood.
An alternative approach incorporates immunomagnetic separation technology and provides greater sensitivity and specificity in the unequivocal detection of intact circulating cancer cells. This simple and sensitive diagnostic tool, as described (U.S. Pat. No. 6,365,362; U.S. Pat. No. 6,551,843; U.S. Pat. No. 6,623,982; U.S. Pat. No. 6,620,627; U.S. Pat. No. 6,645,731; WO 02/077604; WO03/065042; and WO 03/019141) is used in the present invention to correlate the statistical survivability of an individual patient based on a threshold level of greater than or equal to 5 tumor cells in 7.5 to 30 ml blood (1 to 2 tumor cells correspond to about 3000 to 4000 total tumor cells in circulation for a given individual).
Using this diagnostic tool, a blood sample from a cancer patient (WO 03/018757) is incubated with magnetic beads, coated with antibodies directed against an epithelial cell surface antigen as for example EpCAM. After labeling with anti-EpCAM-coated magnetic nanoparticles, the magnetically labeled cells are then isolated using a magnetic separator. The immunomagnetically enriched fraction is further processed for downstream immunocytochemical analysis or image cytometry, for example, in the Cell Spotter® System (Immunicon Corp., PA). The magnetic fraction can also be used for downstream immunocytochemical analysis, RT-PCR, PCR, FISH, flowcytometry, or other types of image cytometry.
One embodiment of the present invention includes image cytometry after immunomagnetic selection and separation to highly enrich and concentrate any epithelial cells present in whole blood samples. The captured cells are detectably labeled with a leukocyte specific marker and with one or more tumor cell specific fluorescent monoclonal antibodies to allow identification and enumeration of the captured CTC's as well as unequivocal instrumental or visual differentiation from contaminating non-target cells. At an extraordinary sensitivity of 1 or 2 epithelial cells per 7.5-30 ml of blood, this assay allows tumor cell detection even in the early stages of low tumor mass. The embodiment of the present invention is not limited to image cytometry, but includes any isolation and imaging protocol of comparable sensitivity and specificity.
Currently available prognostic protocols have not demonstrated a consistently reliable means for correlating CTC's to predict progression free- or overall survival in patients with cancers such as metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Thus, there is a clear need for accurate detection of cancer cells with metastatic potential, not only in MBC but in metastatic cancers in general. Moreover, this need is accentuated by the need to select the most effective therapy for a given patient. We previously described a method for predicting progression free or overall survival in patients with the first follow-up after diagnosis (WO 2004/076643). In this method, ≧5 circulating tumor cells (CTC's) in 7.5 mL of blood is associated with poor clinical outcoume. In the present invention, we provide a method for predicting progression free and overall survival at each follow-up time point during therapy of metastatic breast cancer patients.
The present invention is a method and means for cancer prognosis, incorporating diagnostic tools, such as immunomagnetic enrichment and image cytometry, in assessing time to disease progression, survival, and response to therapy based upon the absolute number, change, or combinations of both of circulating epithelial cells in patients with metastatic cancer at any time during therapy to provide an accurate indication of emerging rapid disease progression and mortality for metastatic breast cancer patients. The system immunomagnetically concentrates epithelial cells, fluorescently labels the cells, identifies and quantifies CTC's for positive enumeration. The statistical analysis of the cell count predicts survival.
More specifically, the present invention provides the apparatus, methods, and kits for assessing patient survival, the time to disease progression, and response to therapy in MBC. Prediction of survival is based upon a threshold comparison of the number of circulating tumor cells in blood with time to death and disease progression. Statistical analysis of long term follow-up studies of patients diagnosed with cancer established a threshold for the number of CTC found in blood and prediction of survival. An absence of CTC's is defined as fewer than 5 morphologically intact CTC's. The presence or absence of CTC's to predict survival is useful in making treatment choices. For example, the absence of CTC's in a woman previously untreated for metastatic breast cancer could be used to select hormonal therapy vs chemotherapy with less side effects and higher quality of life. In contrast, the presence of CTC's could be used to select chemotherapy which has higher side effects but may prolong survival more effectively in a high risk population. Thus, the invention has a prognostic role in the detection of CTC's in women with metastatic breast cancer.
The object of this invention provides for the detection of circulating tumor cells as an early prognostic indicator of patient survival.
Under the broadest aspect of the invention, there is no limitation on the collection and handling of samples as long as consistency is maintained. Accordingly, the cells can be obtained by methods known in the art.
While any effective mechanism for isolating, enriching, and analyzing CTCs in blood is appropriate, one method for collecting circulating tumor cells combines immunomagnetic enrichment technology, immunofluorescent labeling technology with an appropriate analytical platform after initial blood draw. The associated test has the sensitivity and specificity to detect these rare cells in a sample of whole blood and to investigate their role in the clinical course of the disease in malignant tumors of epithelial origin. From a sample of whole blood, rare cells are detected with a sensitivity and specificity to allow them to be collected and used in the diagnostic assays of the invention, namely predicting the clinical course of disease in malignant tumors.
With this technology, circulating tumor cells (CTC) have been shown to exist in the blood in detectable amounts. This created a tool to investigate the significance of cells of epithelial origin in the peripheral circulation of cancer patients (Racila E., Euhus D., Weiss A. J., Rao C., McConnell J., Terstappen L. W. M. M. and Uhr J. W., Detection and characterization of carcinoma cells in the blood, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 95:4589-4594 (1998)). This study demonstrated that these blood-borne cells might have a significant role in the pathophysiology of cancer. Having a detection sensitivity of 1 epithelial cell per 5 ml of blood, the assay incorporates immunomagnetic sample enrichment and fluorescent monoclonal antibody staining followed by flowcytometry for a rapid and sensitive analysis of a sample. The results show that the number of epithelial cells in peripheral blood of eight patients treated for metastatic carcinoma of the breast correlate with disease progression and response to therapy. In 13 of 14 patients with localized disease, 5 of 5 patients with lymph node involvement and 11 of 11 patients with distant metastasis, epithelial cells were found in peripheral blood. The number of epithelial cells was significantly larger in patients with extensive disease.
The assay was further configured to an image cytometric analysis such that the immunomagnetically enriched sample is analyzed by image cytometry (see Example 1). This is a fluorescence-based microscope image analysis system, which in contrast with flowcytometric analysis permits the visualization of events and the assessment of morphologic features to further identify objects.
Automated fluorescence microscopic system, used for automated enumeration of isolated cells from blood, allows for an integrated computer controlled fluorescence microscope and automated stage with a magnetic yoke assembly that will hold a disposable sample cartridge. The magnetic yoke is designed to enable ferrofluid-labeled candidate tumor cells within the sample chamber to be magnetically localized to the upper viewing surface of the sample cartridge for microscopic viewing. Software presents suspect cancer cells, labeled with antibodies to cytokeratin and having epithelial origin, to the operator for final selection.
While isolation of tumor cells can be accomplished by any means known in the art, one embodiment uses a cell stabilization and permeabilization procedure for isolating tumor cells in 7.5 ml of whole blood. Epithelial cell-specific magnetic particles are added and incubated for 20 minutes. After magnetic separation, the cells bound to the immunomagnetic-linked antibodies are magnetically held at the wall of the tube. Unbound sample is then aspirated and an isotonic solution is added to resuspend the sample. A nucleic acid dye, monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratin (a marker of epithelial cells) and CD 45 (a broad-spectrum leukocyte marker) are incubated with the sample. After magnetic separation, the unbound fraction is again aspirated and the bound and labeled cells are resuspended in 0.2 ml of an isotonic solution. The sample is suspended in a cell presentation chamber and placed in a magnetic device whose field orients the magnetically labeled cells for fluorescence microscopic examination. Cells are identified automatically and candidate circulating tumor cells presented to the operator for checklist enumeration. An enumeration checklist consists of predetermined morphologic criteria constituting a complete cell (see example 1).
The diagnostic potential of immunomagnetic enrichment and image cytometry, together with the use of intact circulating tumor cells as a prognostic factor in cancer survival, can provide a rapid and sensitive method for determining appropriate treatment. Accordingly in the present invention, the apparatus, method, and kits are provided for the rapid enumeration and characterization of tumor cells shed into the blood in metastatic and primary patients for prognostic assessment of survival potential.
The methods of the invention are useful in assessing a favorable or unfavorable survival, and even preventing unnecessary therapy that could result in harmful side-effects when the prognosis is favorable. Thus, the present invention can be used for prognosis of any of a wide variety of cancers, including without limitation, solid tumors and leukemia's including highlighted cancers: apudoma, choristoma, branchioma, malignant carcinoid syndrome, carcinoid heart disease, carcinoma (i.e. Walker, basal cell, basosquamous, Brown-Pearce, ductal, Ehrlich tumor, Krebs 2, merkel cell, mucinous, non-small cell lung, oat cell, papillary, scirrhous, bronchiolar, bronchogenic, squamous cell, and transitional cell), histiocytic disorders, leukemia (i.e. B-cell, mixed-cell, null-cell, T-cell, T-cell chronic, HTLV-II-associated, lymphocytic acute, lymphocytic chronic, mast-cell, and myeloid), histiocytosis malignant, Hodgkin's disease, immunoproliferative small, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, plasmacytolma, reticuloendotheliosis, melanoma, chondroblastoma, chondroma, chondrosarcoma, fibroma, fibrosarcoma, giant cell tumors, histiocytoma, lipoma, liposarcoma, mesothelioma, myxoma, myxosarcoma, osteoma, osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, synovioma, adenofibroma, adenolymphoma, carcinosarcoma, chordoma, craniopharyngioma, dysgerminoma, hamartoma, mesenchymoma, mesonephroma, myosarcoma, ameloblastoma, cementoma, odontoma, teratoma, thymoma, trophoblastic tumor, adenocarcinoma, adenoma, cholangioma, cholesteatoma, cylindroma, cystadenocarcinoma, cystadenoma, granulose cell tumor, gynandroblastoma, hepatoma, hidradenoma, islet cell tumor, icydig cell tumor, papilloma, sertoli cell tumor, theca cell tumor, leiomyoma, leiomyosarcoma, myoblastoma, myoma, myosarcoma, rhabdomyoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, ependymoma, ganglioneuroma, glioma, medulloblastoma, meningioma, neurilemmoma, neuroblastoma, neuroepithelioma, neurofibroma, neuroma, paraganglioma, paraganglioma nonchromaffin, angiokeratoma, angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophillia, angioma sclerosing, angiomatosis, glomangioma, hemangioendothelioma, hemangioma, hemangiopericytoma, hemangiosarcoma, lymphangioma, lymphangiomyoma, lymphangiosarcoma, pinealoma, carcinosarcoma, chondroscarcoma, cystosarcoma, phyllodes, fibrosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, leiomyosarcoma, leukosarcoma, liposarcoma, lymphangiosarcoma, myoswarcoma, myxosarcoma, ovarian carcinoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, sarcoma (i.e. Ewing's experimental, Kaposi's and mast-cell), neoplasms (i.e. bone, breast, digestive system, colorectal, liver, pancreatic, pituitary, testicular, orbital, head and neck, central nervous system, acoustic, pelvic, respiratory tract, and urogenital, neurofibromatosis, and cervical dysplasia.
The following examples illustrate the predictive and prognostic value of CTC's in blood from patients. Note, the following examples are offered by way of illustration and are not in any way intended to limit the scope of the invention.
Cytokeratin positive cells are isolated by a cell preservative system using a 7.5 ml sample of whole blood. Epithelial cell-specific immunomagnetic fluid is added and incubated for 20 minutes. After magnetic separation for 20 minutes, the cells bound to the immunomagnetic-linked antibodies are magnetically held at the wall of the tube. Unbound sample is then aspirated and an isotonic solution is added to resuspend the sample. A nucleic acid dye, monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratin (a marker of epithelial cells) and CD 45 (a broad-spectrum leukocyte marker) are incubated with the sample for 15 minutes. After magnetic separation, the unbound fraction is again aspirated and the bound and labeled cells are resuspended in 0.2 ml of an isotonic solution. The sample is suspended in a cell presentation chamber and placed in a magnetic device whose field orients the magnetically labeled cells for fluorescence microscopic examination. Cells are identified automatically; control cells are enumerated by the system, whereas the candidate circulating tumor cells are presented to the operator for enumeration using a checklist as shown (
Radiographic measurements of metastatic lesions are currently used to assess tumor load in cancer patients with metastatic disease. In general, the largest lesions are measured and summed to obtain a tumor load. An example of a bidimensional measurement of a liver metastasis in a breast cancer patient is illustrated in
Image cytometry was used to enumerate CTC's in 7.5 ml of blood from 69 patients with measurable MBC. Tumor load was assessed by bi-dimensional radiographic measurements of up to 8 measurable lesions before initiation of therapy. The tumor load was determined by addition of the individual measurements (mm2). CTC's were enumerated in blood drawn before initiation of therapy.
Thus, tumor burden as measured by radiographic imaging does not correlate with the absolute number of tumor cells present in the blood.
Radiographic imaging is the current standard to assess whether a particular disease is responding, stabilizing, or progressing to treatment. The interval between radiographic measurements must be at least 3 months in order to give meaningful results. Consequently, a test that could predict response to therapy earlier during the treatment cycle would improve the management of patients treated for metastatic diseases, potentially increase quality of life and possibly improve survival. In this study, patients starting a new line of treatment for MBC were assessed to determine whether a change in the number of CTC's correlated with a change in patient status as measured by imaging.
This imaging system was used to enumerate CTC's in 7.5 ml of blood in MBC patients about to start a new therapy, and at various time points during the treatment cycle. Radiographic measurements were made before initiation of therapy, 10-12 weeks after initiation of therapy and after completion of the treatment cycle (approximately 6 months after initiation of therapy), or at the time the patient progressed on therapy, whichever came first.
From image analysis, a partial response was found in 14 patients (17 data segments). CTC's either decreased or remained undetectable in all cases (see
An increase in CTC's was only observed in patients with disease progression (100%). A decrease in CTC's was only observed in patients with a partial response or stable disease (100%). In patients with a partial response or stable disease, no CTC's were detected at both time points in 54 of 61 cases (89%).
A study in patients with MBC was performed to determine whether or not clear trends in changes of the number of CTC could be observed in patients treated for MBC, and whether or not simple rules could be applied to such trends in order to guide the treating physician in optimization of the treatment of patients with MBC.
Image cytometry was used to enumerate CTC's in 7.5 ml of blood. 81 patients, starting a new line of therapy for MBC, were enrolled in the study. CTC's were enumerated in blood drawn before initiation of therapy and at approximately every month thereafter.
Clear trends in the number of CTC's were observed in 76 of 81 (94%) patients. During the course of therapy, the number of CTC's was not detectable or remained below 5 CTC per 7.5 ml of blood in 50% of the patients. A typical example is shown in
Thus, detection and monitoring CTC in patients treated for MBC is a more reproducible procedure to measure response to therapy than radiographic imaging.
A study to correlate CTC levels before initiation of therapy with progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) was performed whereby a threshold value of ≧5 CTC's/7.5 ml was used.
177 patients with measurable MBC were tested for CTC's in 7.5 ml of blood before starting a new line of treatment and at subsequent monthly intervals for a period of up to six months. Patients entering into any type of therapy and any line of therapy were included in the trial. Disease progression or response was assessed by the physicians at the sites for each patient.
As shown in
The measurement of the number of CTC prior to initation of a new line of therapy predicts the time until patients progress on their therapy, and predicts survival time. Because of this predictive ability, detection and measurement of CTC's at baseline provides information to physicians that will be useful in the selection of appropriate treatment. In addition, the ability to stratify patients into high and low risk groups in terms of PFS and OS may be very useful to select appropriate patients for entry into therapeutic trials. For novel drugs with potentially high toxicity, patients with poor prognostic factors may be the more appropriate target population. In contrast, drugs with minimal toxicity and promising therapeutic efficacy may be more appropriately targeted toward patients with favorable prognostic factors.
CTCs were assessed serially over the course of treatment at additional specified intervals. The results demonstrated that assessment of CTC levels at “all” subsequent follow-up time points, accurately and reproducibly predicted the clinical outcome. Patients who converted from elevated CTCs to non-elevated levels (<5 CTC/7.5 mL) exhibited PFS and OS similar to those whose CTCs were never elevated. This would imply that patients with <5 CTCs appear to either be responding to treatment and/or have relatively indolent disease. In contrast, OS of patients who converted from non-elevated CTC levels to elevated CTC levels decreased, but was not as short as the OS of patients that always exhibited elevated CTC levels.
CTCs were enumerated in 177 MBC patients prior to the initiation of a new course of therapy and 3-5, 6-8, 9-14, and 15-20 weeks after the initiation of therapy. Progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) times were calculated from the dates of each follow-up blood draw. Kaplan-Meier plots and survival analyses were performed using a threshold of ≧5 CTCs/7.5 mL at each blood draw.
Median PFS times for patients with <5 CTC at the five blood draw time points were 7.0, 6.1, 5.6, 7.0, and 6.0 months, respectively. For patients with ≧5 CTC, median PFS was significantly shorter at these time points: 2.7, 1.3, 1.4, 3.0, and 3.6 months, respectively. Median OS for patients with <5 CTC at baseline and the five blood draw time points were all >18.5 months. For patients with ≧5 CTC, median OS was significantly shorter at these time points: 10.9, 6.3, 6.3, 6.6, and 6.7 months, respectively. Median PFS (
Detection of elevated CTCs at any time during therapy is an accurate indication of emerging rapid disease progression and mortality for MBC patients Accordingly, CTC's must decline to below 5 at any time point in the clinical course of a patient with metastatic breast cancer to maximize PFS and OS, and to maximize the benefit associated with therapy.
This is a non-provisional application which claims priority to PCT/US04/005848 (WO 2004/076643), filed Feb. 26, 2004 which claims priority of provisional Applications 60/450,519, filed Feb. 27, 2003, and 60/524,759, filed Nov. 25, 2003. Each of the aforementioned applications is incorporated in full by reference herein