Tumor Cells in Blood Shed From the Surgical Field
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 130 (4) , 387-393
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1995.01430040049007
Abstract
Objectives: To analyze blood shed from the surgical field during oncologic surgery for tumor cells and to assess functional characteristics of these cells. Design and Patients: Series of 61 patients with cancer who underwent surgery for an abdominal, orthopedic, urological, gynecological, or head and neck malignant tumor, and blinded comparison with 15 patients with benign diseases undergoing surgery. Setting: A 500-bed tumor center and a tertiary care hospital. Main Outcome Measures: Tumor cells were isolated from intraoperatively salvaged and washed blood by density gradient centrifugation. They were identified in cytospin specimens by their content of cytokeratins and nucleolar organizer regions with a sensitivity of 10 cells in 500 mL of blood. Clonogenicity was tested in a cell colony assay; invasiveness, in Boyden chambers; and tumorigenicity, in nude mice. Results: In 57 of 61 patients, tumor cells were detected in the blood shed during oncologic surgery. They demonstrated proliferation capacity, invasiveness, and tumorigenicity. The total number of tumor cells identified ranged from 1×101to 7×106, with no close correlation to the amount of blood loss. Circulating tumor cells were demonstrated in only 26% of these patients and in small numbers. Conclusions: Malignant cells identified regularly in the blood shed during tumor surgery and different from circulating tumor cells are of concern, since at the surgical site they may cause local tumor recurrence, or in the salvaged blood they may cause hematogenic metastasis after retransfusion. Therefore, the contraindication of intraoperative autotransfusion in tumor surgery is strongly supported, and a review of surgical procedures and adjuvant therapy may be indicated, as the passage of the identified cells to the shed blood is yet unknown. (Arch Surg. 1995;130:387-393)Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Principles of Surgical Resection: Influence of Surgical Technique on Treatment OutcomeSurgical Clinics of North America, 1993
- Operative treatment of colorectal cancerCancer, 1992
- Assessment of nucleolar organizer regions by automatic image analysis in breast cancer: correlation with DNA content, proliferation rate, receptor status and histopathological gradingZeitschrift für Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie, 1990
- Nucleolar Organiser RegionsPublished by Springer Nature ,1990
- Methods for the Purification of Malignant Cells from BloodPublished by Elsevier ,1987
- Intraoperative Autologous TransfusionMayo Clinic Proceedings, 1985
- Percoll density gradient separation of cells from human malignant effusionsBritish Journal of Cancer, 1985
- Reactivity Pattern of a Monoclonal Antikeratin Antibody (KL1)Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1983
- A Rapid Method for the Separation of Functional Lymphoid Cell Populations of Human and Animal Origin on PVP‐Silica (Percoll) Density GradientsScandinavian Journal of Immunology, 1979
- Tumor cells carried through autotransfusion. Contraindication to intraoperative blood recovery?Published by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1975