Detection and clinical implications of minimal residual disease in gastro-intestinal cancer
- 1 July 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Langenbecks Archives Of Surgery
- Vol. 390 (5) , 430-441
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00423-005-0558-3
Abstract
Metastatic dissemination is an important factor for the prognosis of patients with gastro-intestinal cancer. Exact staging is crucial to determine appropriate multimodal therapeutic strategies. At present, the sensitivity of routinely performed diagnostic techniques is suboptimal for the detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) and occult metastases since the number of disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) is mostly marginal. To amend the verification of DTCs, immunohistochemical and molecular methods were applied to retrieve epithelial cell-specific proteins in non-epithelial tissue of different body compartments or fluids. Many groups have eagerly focussed on the identification of new markers and novel tests, yet specificity and sensitivity of these methods as well as robustness in the clinical setting are frequently missing. This review critically evaluates the prognostic impact of MRD in patients with pancreatic, colorectal and gastric cancer by outlining those studies showing diagnostic results of DTC detection in lymph nodes, bone marrow, venous blood and peritoneal lavage, some of which present novel strategies. The analysed data concerning MRD in gastro-intestinal cancers reveal that results are undesirably heterogeneous. From a critical point of view, many clinical studies missed their chance because of small cohort size; moreover, methodological standardisation is generally lacking. On the other hand, the very encouraging results achieved so far, together with the comprehensive analyses of a few research groups, foster the prediction that DTC/MRD issues will soon expand the standard TNM classification.Keywords
This publication has 88 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissecting the metastatic cascadeNature Reviews Cancer, 2004
- Micrometastases from HBP malignancies and metastatic cancerJournal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery, 2002
- Prognostic relevance of immunohistochemically detected lymph node micrometastasis in patients with gastric carcinomaCancer, 2002
- Detection and Prediction of Micrometastasis in the Lymph Nodes of Patients With pN0 Gastric CancerAnnals of Surgical Oncology, 2001
- Colorectal cancerAnnals of Oncology, 2000
- Classification of isolated tumor cells and micrometastasisCancer, 1999
- Micrometastases and Survival in Stage II Colorectal CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Detection of colorectal cancer cells in peripheral blood by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for cytokeratin 20International Journal of Cancer, 1998
- Early Lymphatic Tumor Cell Dissemination in Pancreatic CancerPancreas, 1997
- Epithelial tumour cells in bone marrow of patients with pancreatic carcinoma detected by immunocytochemical stainingEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1996