posted on 2022-06-30, 13:03authored byYunyun Hu, Ye Tian, Haonan Di, Chengfeng Xue, Yanping Zheng, Bin Hu, Qin Lin, Xiaomei Yan
Nasopharyngeal
carcinoma (NPC) is a malignant tumor commonly associated
with Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) infection, and its early diagnosis
as well as its differentiation from nasopharyngitis (NPG) remains
challenging due to the insufficient sensitivity of routine screening
methods in clinical practice. To date, circulating extracellular vesicles
(EVs, 40–1000 nm) have shown appealing potential in liquid
biopsy for cancer diagnosis and prognosis. Herein, nanoflow cytometry
(nFCM) capable of single EV analysis was applied to examine the expression
of surface proteins with very low copy numbers on individual EVs as
small as 40 nm. The particle concentrations of five EV subsets exposing
EBV-encoded latent membrane proteins (LMP1 and LMP2A) and tumor markers
(PD-L1, EGFR, and EpCAM) in plasma were determined rapidly via single-particle
enumeration. We identified a five-marker panel named EVSUM5 (an unweighted sum of the concentration of the five individual EV
subsets) that significantly surpassed the traditional VCA-IgA assay
in discriminating NPC patients from both healthy donors and NPG patients
with accuracies of 96.3 and 83.1%, respectively. Moreover, EVSUM2 (an unweighted sum of virus-specific LMP1- and LMP2A-positive
EVs) could achieve the diagnosis of NPG with an accuracy of 82.6%.
Collectively, the work presented a rapid, reliable, and noninvasive
method as well as two diagnostic markers to help more accurately differentiate
NPC from NPG patients and healthy donors in clinical practice.