Pre-operative circulating tumor cells predict worse treatment outcome in patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer.

Journal: Oncogene

This prospective study evaluated circulating tumor cells (CTCs) as a non-invasive biomarker in women with advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer (FIGO IIIC–IV) undergoing primary cytoreductive surgery.

Key details:

  • Population: 56 women with advanced disease; 9 with benign ovarian disease as controls.
  • Sampling: 7.5 mL peripheral blood pre- and post-operatively.
  • Follow-up: Median 35.4 months.

Findings:

  • CTC detection:
    • Pre-operative: 48.2% (27/56) of patients.
    • Post-operative: 46.4% (26/56).
    • No CTCs detected in benign controls.
  • Pre-operative CTC positivity was significantly associated with:
    • Suboptimal cytoreduction (OR 15.6; 95% CI 2.97–127.0; p=0.0031).
    • Worse platinum response (p=0.0173).
    • Presence of lymph node metastases (p=0.0151).
    • Shorter progression-free survival (PFS; p=0.0045).
    • Shorter overall survival (OS; p=0.0241).
  • Post-operative assessment:
    • Combining post-operative CTC status with residual tumor burden was significantly associated with worse OS (p=0.047).
  • Multivariable analysis: Pre-operative CTCs remained an independent surrogate marker for:
    • Incomplete debulking.
    • Platinum resistance.
    • Poor survival.

Clinical implications:

  • Quantification of CTCs before and after surgery may help:
    • Predict surgical resectability and platinum response.
    • Stratify prognosis.
    • Guide treatment selection (e.g., surgical aggressiveness vs. alternative approaches).
    • Optimize resource allocation and improve patient counseling in advanced high-grade serous ovarian cancer.

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