Abstract 173P
Background
Breast cancer (BC) presents challenges in predicting disease progression despite advancements in treatment and monitoring. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) were initially seen as promising for prognosis via liquid biopsy, but complexities in their investigation have emerged over the past 15 years. Variability in isolation methods and the absence of universal CTC markers hinder standardization and comparison of research findings. In the present study we focused on CD24 which shows potential as a prognostic marker of BC. This study aims to elucidate the prognostic significance of CD24+ circulating cells in peripheral blood of BC patients.
Methods
The study included 57 patients with invasive breast carcinoma of no special type (IC NST) T1-4N0-3M0-1. Circulating cell phenotypes assessment was carried out by flow cytometry (Novocyte 3000, ACEA Biosciences, USA) using monoclonal antibody cocktail.
Results
In our investigation we utilized epithelial markers EpCAM and cytokeratin 7/8 to assess CTCs, including both metastatic and non-metastatic BC patients. Surprisingly, these markers were insufficient in identifying CTC populations indicative of distant metastasis in BC. However, we made the intriguing discovery of CD45-CD24+ circulating cells lacking epithelial markers EpCAM and CK7/8 associated with distant metastasis. Increased level of CD45-EpCAM-CK7/8-CD24+N-cadherin- circulating cells were observed among patients with established metastases and those who developed metastatic lesions during subsequent monitoring. Furthermore, exceeding a threshold of 218.3 cells per milliliter of peripheral blood before treatment predicted a 12-fold increase in metastatic risk and a 3-fold reduction in DMFS over a 90-month period. The unveiled cell population could originate with equal probability from epithelial cells that have undergone EMT or from immature cells from bone marrow. However, it should be noted that these CCs do not align with any recognized stages of monocyte or neutrophil maturation.
Conclusions
The count of CD45-EpCAM-CK7/8-CD24+N-cadherin- CCs was associated with distant metastasis, as their numbers were elevated in peripheral blood of patients with metastases during the follow-up period.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
The study was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (grant #23-15-00135).
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
172P - HER2 expression across solid tumors and real-world implications for use of fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki (T-Dxd)
Presenter: Ahmed Ismail
Session: Poster session 08
174P - Prognostic value of the immune and metabolic profile in the response to neoadjuvant treatment with ICIs in triple-negative breast cancer patients (TNBC)
Presenter: Lucía Serrano García
Session: Poster session 08
175P - Utility of artificial intelligence (AI) in Ki67 scoring of a breast cancer (BC) patient population
Presenter: Xavier Pichon
Session: Poster session 08
176P - ERBB2 amplifications across sex, race, and cancer types
Presenter: Marc Machaalani
Session: Poster session 08
177P - HER2 testing in multiple solid tumors: Concordance between 3 scoring algorithms
Presenter: Wentao Yang
Session: Poster session 08
178P - PD-L1 expression in ER-low versus triple-negative (TN) advanced breast cancer (aBC), and according to phenotypic evolution from primary to recurrent disease
Presenter: Federica Miglietta
Session: Poster session 08
179P - Multimodal deep learning integrating MRI and molecular profiles for predicting outcomes in triple-negative breast cancer
Presenter: Seong Hwan Park
Session: Poster session 08
181P - Molecular characterization and immune microenvironment analysis of MSI-H patients with or without MMR gene mutations
Presenter: Mengxi Ge
Session: Poster session 08
182P - Multi-modal artificial intelligence outperforms image-based approaches for mutation prediction from H&E tissue images in colorectal cancer
Presenter: Marc Päpper
Session: Poster session 08