Clinical value and feasibility of ISET in detecting circulating tumor cells in early breast cancer

Transl Cancer Res. 2020 Jul;9(7):4297-4305. doi: 10.21037/tcr-19-2662.

Abstract

Background: Patients with operable breast cancer have a better prognosis for recovery. However, once distant organ metastasis occurs, the chance of a long-term survival or a cure is limited. The collection and counting of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) by reliable detection techniques are of increasing importance in the diagnosis of early metastasis and prognosis of disease progression. Isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells (ISET) has the advantage of simplicity of operation and high homogeneity. It is practical for large-scale clinical detection showing cell abundance. The value of ISET in the detection of circulating breast cancers in the blood has not been determined. The purpose of this study is to explore the feasibility of applying ISET to detect CTCs by determining the detection rate of ISET in operable breast cancer and by evaluating the correlation between detection rate, cell count and clinical factors such as molecular typing and pathological staging.

Methods: The experiment included 193 breast cancer patients who were diagnosed by core needle biopsy before the operation. 10 mL of venous blood was collected from the patients preoperatively, and CTCs in their blood samples were counted and analyzed by ISET.

Results: Patients were divided into groups according to pathology and immunohistochemistry. The overall detection rate of CTCs by ISET was 41.24%. The detection rate, the number of overall CTCs and the average number of CTCs in each group were analyzed individually. No significant differences were observed between the different groups.

Conclusions: Although ISET has a relatively good detection rate for circulating breast cancer cells, it fails to provide more information on pathological staging, molecular classification and so forth.

Keywords: Isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells (ISET); breast cancer; circulating tumor cells (CTCs).