Objective: Gastric cancer carries a poor prognosis even after curative resection (R0). Tumor progression in gastric cancer patients has been attributed to the persistence of disseminated tumor cells (DTC) in various body compartments as a sign of minimal residual disease, although the prognostic relevance of DTC is still unclear. In this study the prognostic relevance of DTC in the blood of gastric cancer patients was investigated.

Materials And Methods: Venous blood samples of 70 cancer patients were taken intraoperatively before surgical manipulation and examined by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for expression of cytokeratin 20 (CK20) as a marker for DTC. Tumor-related survival was analyzed using univariate and multivariate models assessing occurrence of DTC, residual tumor classification, and tumor stage. Median follow-up was 20 months (range 1-57 months).

Results: Twenty-eight of the 70 patients (40%) were CK20 positive. The prevalence of DTC in patients following R0 resection (15/41, 37%) was similar to that in patients with residual tumor (13/29, 45%, NS). Furthermore, expression of CK20 was independent of TNM stage. Univariate analysis of R0-resected patients revealed CK20 to be a marker for significantly shorter tumor-related survival (p = 0.0363). In a multivariate analysis, CK20 was an independent prognostic marker. Detection of CK20 had greatest impact for early tumor stages (T1 and T2, N0; p < 0.0032).

Conclusions: Detection of DTC in venous blood of gastric cancer patients is an independent predictive marker of poor prognosis and thus could help to define patients for adjuvant therapy with this tumor entity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00365520510015557DOI Listing

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