Detection of circulating epithelial cells after surgery for benign breast disease.

Mol Diagn

Department of Clinical Pathology, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, MI 48073-6769, USA.

Published: March 2000

Background: Cytokeratins are predominantly expressed in epithelial cells and their malignant counterparts. Ultrasensitive methods for cytokeratin messenger RNAs (mRNAs) can detect rare circulating tumor cells consistent with hematogenous dissemination in epithelial-derived malignancies, including breast carcinomas. Intraoperative tumor-cell shedding may contribute to this process; this hypothesis is based on the assumption that only tumor cells can be mobilized during surgical manipulation.

Methods And Results: The present study addresses this issue by using cytokeratin 19 mRNA detection by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in preoperative and postoperative blood samples from 54 patients undergoing excisional biopsy for benign breast disease; 22 healthy volunteers represented the control group. No cytokeratin RT-PCR positivity was found in the control or preoperative samples. Cytokeratin RT-PCR positivity was found in 21 postoperative samples (39%).

Conclusions: This finding shows that benign epithelial cells can be mobilized during breast surgery; this effect of surgical manipulation warrants caution in the interpretation of RT-PCR positivity for cytokeratin mRNA in the peripheral blood of patients undergoing surgery for breast cancer.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03262020DOI Listing

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