Postoperative metastasis prediction based on portal vein circulating tumor cells detected by flow cytometry in periampullary or pancreatic cancer

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Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate the value of flow cytometry (FCM) detection of portal vein circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in predicting postoperative metastasis. Methods: Samples of portal venous blood and peripheral blood were collected from 39 patients during surgery, and CTCs were detected by FCM, with confirmation by laser confocal microscopy and single-cell sequencing. Results: Among all patients, a portal EpCAM+CD45-percentage ≥24.5×10−4 (P=0.06), peripheral EpCAM+CD45-count ≥97/5 mL (P=0.034), peripheral EpCAM+CD45-percentage ≥4.4×10−4 (P=0.042), and CA242≥3.5 U/mL (P=0.027) were significant predictors of metastasis. Further analysis showed that the portal EpCAM+CD45-ratio ≥24.5×10−4 is a predictor of metastasis (P=0.025) in pancreatic cancer after curative resection. Conclusion: CTCs detected by FCM in portal venous blood are of significant value for the prediction of postoperative metastasis in pancreatic or periampullary tumors.

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Tao, L., Su, L., Yuan, C., Ma, Z., Zhang, L., Bo, S., … Xiu, D. (2019). Postoperative metastasis prediction based on portal vein circulating tumor cells detected by flow cytometry in periampullary or pancreatic cancer. Cancer Management and Research, 11, 7405–7425. https://doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S210332

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