Reality of Single Circulating Tumor Cell Sequencing for Molecular Diagnostics in Pancreatic Cancer

Colin M. Court, Jacob S. Ankeny, Shonan Sho, Shuang Hou, Qingyu Li, Carolyn Hsieh, Min Song, Xinfang Liao, Matthew M. Rochefort, Zev A. Wainberg, Thomas G. Graeber, Hsian Rong Tseng, James S. Tomlinson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

39 Scopus citations

Abstract

To understand the potential and limitations of circulating tumor cell (CTC) sequencing for molecular diagnostics, we investigated the feasibility of identifying the ubiquitous KRAS mutation in single CTCs from pancreatic cancer (PC) patients. We used the NanoVelcro/laser capture microdissection CTC platform, combined with whole genome amplification and KRAS Sanger sequencing. We assessed both KRAS codon-12 coverage and the degree that allele dropout during whole genome amplification affected the detection of KRAS mutations from single CTCs. We isolated 385 single cells, 163 from PC cell lines and 222 from the blood of 12 PC patients, and obtained KRAS sequence coverage in 218 of 385 single cells (56.6%). For PC cell lines with known KRAS mutations, single mutations were detected in 67% of homozygous cells but only 37.4% of heterozygous single cells, demonstrating that both coverage and allele dropout are important causes of mutation detection failure from single cells. We could detect KRAS mutations in CTCs from 11 of 12 patients (92%) and 33 of 119 single CTCs sequenced, resulting in a KRAS mutation detection rate of 27.7%. Importantly, KRAS mutations were never found in the 103 white blood cells sequenced. Sequencing of groups of cells containing between 1 and 100 cells determined that at least 10 CTCs are likely required to reliably assess KRAS mutation status from CTCs.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)688-696
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Molecular Diagnostics
Volume18
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2016
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology

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