Back to Search Start Over

Acoustic enrichment of heterogeneous circulating tumor cells and clusters from metastatic prostate cancer patients

Authors :
Magnusson, Cecilia
Augustsson, Per
Undvall Anand, Eva
Lenshof, Andreas
Josefsson, Andreas
Welén, Karin
Bjartell, Anders
Ceder, Yvonne
Lilja, Hans
Laurell, Thomas
Magnusson, Cecilia
Augustsson, Per
Undvall Anand, Eva
Lenshof, Andreas
Josefsson, Andreas
Welén, Karin
Bjartell, Anders
Ceder, Yvonne
Lilja, Hans
Laurell, Thomas
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: There are important unmet clinical needs to develop cell enrichment technologies to enable unbiased label-free isolation of both single cell and clusters of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) manifesting heterogeneous lineage specificity. Here, we report a pilot study based on the microfluidic acoustophoresis enrichment of CTCs using the CellSearch CTC assay as a reference modality. Methods: Acoustophoresis uses an ultrasonic standing wave field to separate cells based on biomechanical properties (size, density, and compressibility), resulting in inherently label-free and epitope-independent cell enrichment. Following red blood cell lysis and paraformaldehyde fixation, 6 mL of whole blood from 12 patients with metastatic prostate cancer and 20 healthy controls were processed with acoustophoresis and subsequent image cytometry. Results: Acoustophoresis enabled enrichment and characterization of phenotypic CTCs (EpCAM+, Cytokeratin+, DAPI+, CD45-/CD66b-) in all patients with metastatic prostate cancer and detected CTC-clusters composed of only CTCs or heterogeneous aggregates of CTCs clustered with various types of white blood cells in 9 out of 12 patients. By contrast, CellSearch did not detect any CTC clusters, but detected comparable numbers of phenotypic CTCs as acoustophoresis, with trends of finding a higher number of CTCs using acoustophoresis. Conclusion: Our preliminary data indicate that acoustophoresis provides excellent possibilities to detect and characterize CTC clusters as a putative marker of metastatic disease and outcomes. Moreover, acoustophoresis enables the sensitive label-free enrichment of cells with epithelial phenotypes in blood and offers opportunities to detect and characterize CTCs undergoing epithelial-to-mesenchymal transitioning and lineage plasticity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457289886
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021.acs.analchem.3c05371