National Repository of Grey Literature 9 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Rare cells in diagnostics and monitoring of gynecological diseases
Kiss, Imrich ; Bobek, Vladimír (advisor) ; Špaček, Jiří (referee) ; Klézl, Petr (referee)
In the last two decades there is an enormous effort to discover a non-invasive marker to diagnose, predict and monitor therapy effect of malignant diseases. Circulating tumor cells (CTC) have the ability to fulfil all these criteria. The introduction of the monothematic thesis deals with the problematics of CTC in general and its application in clinical medicine. It is followed by the author's first publication, which reviews the current status of CTC in gynecological malignancies. The next publication is an original article about CTC in patients with endometrial carcinoma. It reports a successful isolation of vital CTC in 75% of tested patients and identifies CTC as an individual marker of the disease without correlation to the stage, grade or lymph nodes involvement. The second part of this thesis deals with endometriosis, a benign but often recurrent disease worsening the life quality of women in reproductive age. The multicentre study presents a successful isolation of circulating endometrial cells (CEC) in patients with histologically proven endometriosis with various stages and symptoms. From the total of 423 samples 78.4% were CEC positive. Eleven patients were monitored during their menstrual cycle and CEC tested in different phases, being the early post-ovulatory period in which the...
Morphological and Genomic Profiling of Circulating Tumor Cells in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Thiele, Jana-Aletta ; Pitule, Pavel (advisor) ; Mohelníková Duchoňová, Beatrice (referee) ; Kasimir-Bauer, Sabine (referee)
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide; it is responsible for nearly 10% of all newly diagnosed cancers and is the second most cause of cancer related death in Europe. Biomarkers for therapy guidance, targeted therapy and survival prognosis are still limited. As CRC is a heterogeneous disease, different parts of the tumor might have varying molecular characteristics which may change during therapy or disease progression. Through solid biopsies and screenings, these local or temporal differences are impossible to monitor. To facilitate detection of these possible temporal changes, a regularly and non-invasively accessible biomarker is required for disease monitoring. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) might represent such a biomarker as they have been shown to be fluid surrogates of the solid tumor. EpCAM positive CTCs have shown to be prognostic in CRC for survival, but their full potential has not yet been evaluated further. By using the High Definition Single Cell Analysis (HD-SCA) workflow, we were able to analyze the entire spectrum of CTCs and categorize them as the regular CTCs (HD-CTC), CTCs with a smaller nuclear area (CTC-Small), CTCs with low expression of epithelial marker cytokeratin (CTC-LowCK) and CTCs undergoing apoptosis and therefore releasing cell free DNA...
Detection of minimal residual disease in bone marrow an peripheral blood in patients with breast cancer.
Čabiňaková, Michaela ; Tesařová, Petra (advisor) ; Konopásek, Bohuslav (referee) ; Macek, Milan (referee)
Introduction: Simultaneous detection of disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) was shown to be associated with an especially poor prognosis and increased incidence of disease-related deaths in non-metastatic breast cancer patients. We analyzed the occurance of DTCs in bone marrow and CTCs in peripheral blood in patients with primary breast cancer, we evaluated the correlation of their presence with other prognostic markers and we investigated the changes in DTCs/CTCs number at different time points during treatment. Materials and methods: Blood of 50 patients with primary breast cancer were used for immunomagnetic separation and detection of circulating tumor cells using the commercial available system the AdnaTest Breast Cancer™ (AdnaGen GmbH, Langenhagen, Germany). Bone marrow aspirates from 50 patients were analyzed for DTCs by immunocytochemistry using the pancytokeratin antibody conjugated with FITC (Monoclonal Anti-Cytokeratin antibody F3418, Sigma Aldrich, USA). Results: DTCs were identified in 30% (15/50) and CTCs in 22% (11/50) of patients. We found that DTC positivity could point to a significantly high risk of larger primary tumor size (p- value 0.011) and significantly higher risk of lymph node involvement (p- value 0.002). For CTC positivity, no such...
Laboratory diagnostics of micrometastases in breast cancer patients
Mikulová, Veronika ; Zima, Tomáš (advisor) ; Svoboda, Marek (referee) ; Průša, Richard (referee)
Introduction: The presence of circulating tumor cells (CTC) in the peripheral blood has been associated with worse prognosis and early relapse in breast cancer patients. CTC determination in the peripheral blood has been considered as a liquid biopsy. The aim of this project was to analyze the presence of CTC followed by their molecular characterization with the potential use not only as a new biomarker for real-time monitoring of therapy efficacy but also as a suitable tool for patient's stratification and individualization of treatment for breast cancer. Methods: A total of 54 patients with diagnosed early breast cancer were enrolled into a prospective study. Ten millilitres of peripheral blood were sequentially collected to test for the presence and characterization of CTC during the follow-up of patients. CTC isolation and detection was performed by AdnaTest BreastCancer™ (AdnaGen AG, Germany), which is based on the detection of EpCAM, HER2 and MUC1 specific transcripts in enriched CTC- lysates. cDNA from isolated CTC has been further used for newly optimized qPCR assays for breast tumor and therapy resistance associated genes: TOP1, TOP2A, CSTD, ST6GAL, KRT19 and reference gene actin. qPCR results have been analyzed by Genex software (MultiD Analysis). Results: 195 blood samples have been...
Detection of circulating tumour cells and their clinical application in patients with bioptically proven prostate cancer.
Čapoun, Otakar ; Soukup, Viktor (advisor) ; Zachoval, Roman (referee) ; Veselý, Štěpán (referee)
1 ABSTRACT Introduction and aim of the study Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are a promising tool of identifying patients with castration- resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) who will benefit from often demanding cytotoxic therapy. The aim of this work was to evaluate the prognostic significance of CTC in docetaxel-treated CRPC patients. During the project, we also tested the various methods of CTC cultivation and studied their genetic profile as well as the genetic profile of histological specimen at the time of diagnosis. Patients and methods A total of 39 patients who met the CRPC criteria and were indicated for docetaxel chemotherapy were included in the prospective study. Blood collection for CTC analysis was done in all patients before chemotherapy and on the first day of the fourth or fifth cycle of docetaxel. In parallel, CTCs were cultivated. Isolation and detection of CTC was done using the AdnaTest system, which consists of immunomagnetic separation and subsequent detection of mRNA from the CTC lysate. The primary objective of the study was to evaluate the overall survival (OS) of patients. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meier method of estimating the survival distribution function. The impact of individual factors was tested using the Log-rank test, the Wilcoxon test and the Cox...
Morphological and Genomic Profiling of Circulating Tumor Cells in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Thiele, Jana-Aletta ; Pitule, Pavel (advisor) ; Mohelníková Duchoňová, Beatrice (referee) ; Kasimir-Bauer, Sabine (referee)
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide; it is responsible for nearly 10% of all newly diagnosed cancers and is the second most cause of cancer related death in Europe. Biomarkers for therapy guidance, targeted therapy and survival prognosis are still limited. As CRC is a heterogeneous disease, different parts of the tumor might have varying molecular characteristics which may change during therapy or disease progression. Through solid biopsies and screenings, these local or temporal differences are impossible to monitor. To facilitate detection of these possible temporal changes, a regularly and non-invasively accessible biomarker is required for disease monitoring. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) might represent such a biomarker as they have been shown to be fluid surrogates of the solid tumor. EpCAM positive CTCs have shown to be prognostic in CRC for survival, but their full potential has not yet been evaluated further. By using the High Definition Single Cell Analysis (HD-SCA) workflow, we were able to analyze the entire spectrum of CTCs and categorize them as the regular CTCs (HD-CTC), CTCs with a smaller nuclear area (CTC-Small), CTCs with low expression of epithelial marker cytokeratin (CTC-LowCK) and CTCs undergoing apoptosis and therefore releasing cell free DNA...
Individualization of the treatment of prostate cancer patients based on the immunocytochemical detection of circulating tumor cells
Škereňová, Markéta ; Zima, Tomáš (advisor) ; Průša, Richard (referee) ; Svoboda, Marek (referee)
Introduction: Together with the introduction of new therapeutic options in castration- resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), an advance in individual disease characterization is required. Since common biopsy methods are not suitable for the majority of CRPC patients, one possible solution is the liquid biopsy that is, the analysis of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) isolated from the cancer patients' blood. Methods: A method based on the immunomagnetic enrichment of CTCs and subsequent PCR detection of tumor-associated genes (AdnaTest, Qiagen) was characterized and used for the detection of CTCs in 41 CRPC patients. Each patient was screened at the time of CRPC diagnosis and after the 3rd cycle of docetaxel therapy. A panel of genes associated with therapeutic decision-making was established and validated. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) method on a BioMark platform (Fluidigm, USA) was used to determine the expression of the gene panel in the CTC-enriched and primary tumor samples and the results were analyzed. Results: CTCs were found in 85% and 45% of CRPC patients before and during the therapy, respectively. The presence of CTCs, as well as EGFR and AR PCR fragments, was associated with a decreased sPSA response and lower survival. The gene expression of the CTC- enriched and primary tumor samples differed...
Detection of minimal residual disease in bone marrow an peripheral blood in patients with breast cancer.
Čabiňaková, Michaela ; Tesařová, Petra (advisor) ; Konopásek, Bohuslav (referee) ; Macek, Milan (referee)
Introduction: Simultaneous detection of disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) was shown to be associated with an especially poor prognosis and increased incidence of disease-related deaths in non-metastatic breast cancer patients. We analyzed the occurance of DTCs in bone marrow and CTCs in peripheral blood in patients with primary breast cancer, we evaluated the correlation of their presence with other prognostic markers and we investigated the changes in DTCs/CTCs number at different time points during treatment. Materials and methods: Blood of 50 patients with primary breast cancer were used for immunomagnetic separation and detection of circulating tumor cells using the commercial available system the AdnaTest Breast Cancer™ (AdnaGen GmbH, Langenhagen, Germany). Bone marrow aspirates from 50 patients were analyzed for DTCs by immunocytochemistry using the pancytokeratin antibody conjugated with FITC (Monoclonal Anti-Cytokeratin antibody F3418, Sigma Aldrich, USA). Results: DTCs were identified in 30% (15/50) and CTCs in 22% (11/50) of patients. We found that DTC positivity could point to a significantly high risk of larger primary tumor size (p- value 0.011) and significantly higher risk of lymph node involvement (p- value 0.002). For CTC positivity, no such...
Laboratory diagnostics of micrometastases in breast cancer patients
Mikulová, Veronika ; Zima, Tomáš (advisor) ; Svoboda, Marek (referee) ; Průša, Richard (referee)
Introduction: The presence of circulating tumor cells (CTC) in the peripheral blood has been associated with worse prognosis and early relapse in breast cancer patients. CTC determination in the peripheral blood has been considered as a liquid biopsy. The aim of this project was to analyze the presence of CTC followed by their molecular characterization with the potential use not only as a new biomarker for real-time monitoring of therapy efficacy but also as a suitable tool for patient's stratification and individualization of treatment for breast cancer. Methods: A total of 54 patients with diagnosed early breast cancer were enrolled into a prospective study. Ten millilitres of peripheral blood were sequentially collected to test for the presence and characterization of CTC during the follow-up of patients. CTC isolation and detection was performed by AdnaTest BreastCancer™ (AdnaGen AG, Germany), which is based on the detection of EpCAM, HER2 and MUC1 specific transcripts in enriched CTC- lysates. cDNA from isolated CTC has been further used for newly optimized qPCR assays for breast tumor and therapy resistance associated genes: TOP1, TOP2A, CSTD, ST6GAL, KRT19 and reference gene actin. qPCR results have been analyzed by Genex software (MultiD Analysis). Results: 195 blood samples have been...

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