Purpose: Microvesicles (MV) in the blood stream are associated with distant metastasis in cancer. Platelet or endothelial cell-related MV actively participate in thrombogenesis, which is an important step in cancer metastasis. This study investigated the correlations between MV levels of platelet-poor plasma and distant metastasis in lung cancer.
Methods: Platelet-poor plasma from 44 treatment-naive lung cancer (23 with distant metastasis) and 19 normal subjects was used to determine the levels of glycoprotein Iβ (CD42) + platelet MV (PMV), P-selectin (CD62P) + PMV, VE-cadherin (CD144) + endothelial MV (EMV), tissue factor (CD142) + MV, thrombin-antithrombin complex and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF).
Results: The level of CD142 + MV was significant (odds ratio 5.86, 95 % confidence interval 1.31-38.3) in predicting distant metastasis in lung cancer, and a cutoff value of 2.668 (after logarithm transformation) in the ROC curve had a specificity of 90 % and a sensitivity of 59 %. The presence of distant metastasis showed a significant correlation between CD144 + EMV and VEGF, but not between CD144 + EMV and CD42 + PMV or CD62P + PMV in lung cancer subjects.
Conclusions: The finding of CD142 + MV in platelet-poor plasma may be useful for suggesting distant metastasis in lung cancer. In addition to thrombogenesis, interaction between VE-cadherin and VEGF may be needed for successful metastasis in lung cancer.