Molecular Deconvolution of Circulating “Other Cells”: A Reliable Predictive Marker of Therapy Response and Survival in Neuroendocrine Tumor Patients Receiving 177Lu‐DOTATATE PRRT
Mahesh K. Padwal, Rahul V. Parghane, Sandip Basu, Bhakti Basu

TL;DR
This study shows that measuring a specific blood cell type before treatment can predict how well neuroendocrine tumor patients will respond to a type of radiation therapy and their survival chances.
Contribution
The study introduces pre-treatment circulating 'other cells' as a novel predictive biomarker for therapy response and survival in neuroendocrine tumor patients undergoing PRRT.
Findings
NET patients had significantly higher OC% compared to healthy donors.
Higher OC% was associated with worse tumor characteristics and treatment outcomes.
OC% identified a subgroup of patients at higher risk of PRRT failure and poor prognosis.
Abstract
To assess the prognostic impact of pre‐treatment circulating other cells on treatment response and survival in neuroendocrine tumor (NET) patients receiving Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT) with 177Lu‐DOTATATE. Healthy donors (HDs, n = 81) and NET patients (n = 137) were analyzed. Baseline circulating other cells proportions (OC%) were deconvoluted from RNA‐Seq profiles using the Kassandra‐B algorithm. Associations of OC% with demographic and clinicopathologic characteristics, tumor response to PRRT, and survival outcomes were evaluated. NET patients had a significantly higher OC% compared to HDs (median = 0.26 vs. 0.18, p = 0.0018). A positive correlation was observed between OC% and the tumor grade (G3 tumors: median = 0.47, G1 tumors: median = 0.22, p = 0.029) or disease burden (high: median = 0.32, low: median = 0.23, p = 0.016). The OC% was negatively associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroendocrine Tumor Research Advances · Radiopharmaceutical Chemistry and Applications · Lung Cancer Research Studies
