Precision cancer medicine for non‐small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has increased patient survival. Nevertheless, targeted agents towards tumor‐associated membrane receptors only result in partial remission for a limited time, calling for approaches which allow longitudinal treatment monitoring. Rebiopsy of tumors in the lung is challenging, and metastatic lesions may have heterogeneous signaling. One way ahead is to use liquid biopsies such as circulating tumor DNA or small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) secreted by the tumor into blood or other body fluids. Herein, an immuno‐PCR‐based detection of the tumor‐associated membrane receptors EGFR, HER2, and IGF‐1R on CD9‐positive sEVs from NSCLC cells and pleural effusion fluid (PE) of NSCLC patients is developed utilizing DNA conjugates of antibody mimetics and affibodies, as detection agents. Results on sEVs purified from culture media of NSCLC cells treated with anti‐EGFR siRNA, showed that the reduction of EGFR expression can be detected via immuno‐PCR. Protein profiling of sEVs from NSCLC patient PE samples revealed the capacity to monitor EGFR, HER2, and IGF‐1R with the immuno‐PCR method. We detected a significantly higher EGFR level in sEVs derived from a PE sample of a patient with an EGFR‐driven NSCLC adenocarcinoma than in sEVs from PE samples of non‐EGFR driven adenocarcinoma patients or in samples from patients with benign lung disease. In summary, we have developed a diagnostic method for sEVs in liquid biopsies of cancer patients which may be used for longitudinal treatment monitoring to detect emerging bypassing resistance mechanisms in a noninvasive way.
CITATION STYLE
Stiller, C., Viktorsson, K., Gomero, E. P., Hååg, P., Arapi, V., Kaminskyy, V. O., … Karlström, A. E. (2021). Detection of tumor‐associated membrane receptors on extracellular vesicles from non‐small cell lung cancer patients via immuno‐pcr. Cancers, 13(4), 1–21. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040922
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