Investigator

Kathy Gately

Clinical Senior Lecturer · Trinity College Dublin, Clinical Medicine

About

KGKathy Gately
Papers(1)
A pilot study evaluat…
Collaborators(10)
Lucy NorrisMarika KanjugaMark P. WardSharon O’TooleTanya KellyVolga M. SainiCatherine O'GormanEzgi OnerFaye LewisFeras Abu Saadeh
Institutions(3)
Unknown InstitutionTrinity College Dubli…St Jamess Hospital

Papers

A pilot study evaluating the feasibility of enriching and detecting circulating tumour cells from peripheral and ovarian veins in rare epithelial ovarian carcinomas.

Studies on circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in rare epithelial ovarian carcinomas (EOC) are limited, despite their potential as a minimally invasive biomarker for monitoring cancer progression and predicting outcomes. This pilot study aimed to assess the feasibility of enriching and detecting CTCs from both peripheral and ovarian vein blood samples in rare EOC subtypes. Blood samples were collected from the peripheral and ovarian veins of 20 patients with rare EOC. Among the 20 patients, 12 had early-stage disease (I-II), while 8 had advanced disease (III-IV). CTCs were enriched using the Parsortix® system and immunophenotyped via immunofluorescence targeting epithelial markers (EpCAM/pan-cytokeratin) and Hoechst for positive selection, and CD45 for negative selection. CTC status (positive versus negative) was correlated with clinicopathological data. CTCs were successfully detected in 45 % (1-19 CTCs) of baseline peripheral samples and 55 % (1-4776 CTCs) of ovarian vein samples. CTC doublets and clusters were detected in ovarian vein samples (3/11), but not in peripheral samples (0/20). A higher proportion of deaths were observed in CTC+ patients compared to CTC- patients (p = 0.0088). Here we demonstrate the feasibility of enriching and detecting CTCs from both peripheral and ovarian vein blood in patients with rare EOC. The higher CTC yield in ovarian vein blood suggests that tumour-draining blood may play a role in improving CTC detection. This pilot study paves the way for larger studies to investigate the prognostic utility of CTCs and refine their clinical value in these rare understudied EOC.

67Works
1Papers
13Collaborators
Lung NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorBiomarkers, Tumor

Positions

2004–

Clinical Senior Lecturer

Trinity College Dublin · Clinical Medicine

2004–

Clinical Scientist

St. James's Hospital · Thoracic Oncology