Background: To assess if surgical manipulation increases peripheral blood cancer cells dissemination in early stage (I and II) breast cancer patients.
Patients and methods: We analyzed 64 patients using RT-PCR for cytokeratin-19 as a marker for peripheral blood breast cancer cell dissemination. Peripheral blood was obtained at 4 different time-points (24 hours before and after surgery, one week and one month later).
Results: RT-PCR was positive in 14 (24%) out of 59 evaluable patients. Circulating cells were detected in 4 out of 14 patients before surgery (7%) while in the remaining 10, the positivity was observed after surgery (17%). The percentage of patients with occult breast cancer cells increased significantly after surgery (p = 0.01).
Conclusion: 1) 7% of early breast cancer patients had circulating tumor cells before surgery. 2) After surgery tumor cells were detected in 17% of patients. 3) Surgery significantly increased the presence of occult breast cancer cells. 4) The clinical significance of occult breast cancer cells should be tested within a larger clinical trial trying to assess their role as an independent prognostic factor.