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Clinical Validation of an Ultra High-Throughput Spiral Microfluidics for the Detection and Enrichment of Viable Circulating Tumor Cells

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Han, Jongyoon
Khoo, Bee Luan
Warkiani, Majid Ebrahimi
Tan, Daniel Shao-Weng
Bhagat, Ali Asgar S.
Irwin, Darryl
Lau, Dawn Pingxi
Lim, Alvin S. T.
Lim, Kiat Hon
Krisna, Sai Sakktee
Lim, Wan-Teck
Yap, Yoon Sim
Lee, Soo Chin
Soo, Ross A.
Lim, Chwee Teck
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Han, Jongyoon
Khoo, Bee Luan
Warkiani, Majid Ebrahimi
Tan, Daniel Shao-Weng
Bhagat, Ali Asgar S.
Irwin, Darryl
Lau, Dawn Pingxi
Lim, Alvin S. T.
Lim, Kiat Hon
Krisna, Sai Sakktee
Lim, Wan-Teck
Yap, Yoon Sim
Lee, Soo Chin
Soo, Ross A.
Lim, Chwee Teck
Source :
Public Library of Science
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cancer cells that can be isolated via liquid biopsy from blood and can be phenotypically and genetically characterized to provide critical information for guiding cancer treatment. Current analysis of CTCs is hindered by the throughput, selectivity and specificity of devices or assays used in CTC detection and isolation. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we enriched and characterized putative CTCs from blood samples of patients with both advanced stage metastatic breast and lung cancers using a novel multiplexed spiral microfluidic chip. This system detected putative CTCs under high sensitivity (100%, n = 56) (Breast cancer samples: 12–1275 CTCs/ml; Lung cancer samples: 10–1535 CTCs/ml) rapidly from clinically relevant blood volumes (7.5 ml under 5 min). Blood samples were completely separated into plasma, CTCs and PBMCs components and each fraction were characterized with immunophenotyping (Pan-cytokeratin/CD45, CD44/CD24, EpCAM), fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) (EML4-ALK) or targeted somatic mutation analysis. We used an ultra-sensitive mass spectrometry based system to highlight the presence of an EGFR-activating mutation in both isolated CTCs and plasma cell-free DNA (cf-DNA), and demonstrate concordance with the original tumor-biopsy samples. Conclusions/Significance: We have clinically validated our multiplexed microfluidic chip for the ultra high-throughput, low-cost and label-free enrichment of CTCs. Retrieved cells were unlabeled and viable, enabling potential propagation and real-time downstream analysis using next generation sequencing (NGS) or proteomic analysis.<br />Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Public Library of Science
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1155490933
Document Type :
Electronic Resource