Sophia Zackrisson
Research group manager, Principal investigator, Professor, MD
No evidence for shedding of circulating tumor cells to the peripheral venous blood as a result of mammographic breast compression.
Author
Summary, in English
This pilot study aimed to investigate whether mammographic compression procedures might cause shedding of tumor cells into the circulatory system as reflected by circulating tumor cell (CTC) count in peripheral venous blood samples. From March to October 2012, 24 subjects with strong suspicion of breast malignancy were included in the study. Peripheral blood samples were acquired before and after mammography. Enumeration of CTCs in the blood samples was performed using the CellSearch(®) system. The pressure distribution over the tumor-containing breast was measured using thin pressure sensors. The median age was 66.5 years (range, 51-87 years). In 22 of the 24 subjects, breast cancer was subsequently confirmed. The difference between the average mean tumor pressure 6.8 ± 5.3 kPa (range, 1.0-22.5 kPa) and the average mean breast pressure 3.4 ± 1.6 kPa (range, 1.5-7.1 kPa) was statistically significant (p < 0.001), confirming that there was increased pressure over the tumor. The median pathological tumor size was 19 mm (range, 9-30 mm). Four subjects (17 %) were CTC positive before compression and two of these (8 %) were also CTC positive after compression. A total of seven CTCs were isolated with a mean size of 8 × 6 μm(2) (range of the longest diameter, 5-12 μm). The study supports the view that mammography is a safe procedure from the point of view of tumor cell shedding to the peripheral blood.
Department/s
- Medical Radiation Physics, Malmö
- Radiology Diagnostics, Malmö
- Pathology, Malmö
- Surgery (Lund)
- Breastcancer-genetics
- The Liquid Biopsy and Tumor Progression in Breast Cancer
- BioCARE: Biomarkers in Cancer Medicine improving Health Care, Education and Innovation
Publishing year
2013
Language
English
Pages
187-195
Publication/Series
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Volume
141
Issue
2
Links
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Springer
Topic
- Cancer and Oncology
Status
Published
Project
- CTC-MBC, Circulating Tumor Cells in Metastatic Breast Cancer
Research group
- Medical Radiation Physics, Malmö
- Radiology Diagnostics, Malmö
- Pathology, Malmö
- The Liquid Biopsy and Tumor Progression in Breast Cancer
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1573-7217