Isolation and retrieval of circulating tumor cells using centrifugal forces

Han Wei Hou(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Majid Ebrahimi Warkiani(Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology), Bee Luan Khoo(National University of Singapore), Zirui Li(Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology), Ross A. Soo(University of Western Australia), Daniel Shao-Weng Tan(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Wan‐Teck Lim(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Jongyoon Han(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Ali Asgar S. Bhagat(Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology), Chwee Teck Lim(Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology)
Scientific Reports
February 12, 2013
Cited by 724Open Access
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Abstract

Presence and frequency of rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in bloodstreams of cancer patients are pivotal to early cancer detection and treatment monitoring. Here, we use a spiral microchannel with inherent centrifugal forces for continuous, size-based separation of CTCs from blood (Dean Flow Fractionation (DFF)) which facilitates easy coupling with conventional downstream biological assays. Device performance was optimized using cancer cell lines (> 85% recovery), followed by clinical validation with positive CTCs enumeration in all samples from patients with metastatic lung cancer (n = 20; 5-88 CTCs per mL). The presence of CD133⁺ cells, a phenotypic marker characteristic of stem-like behavior in lung cancer cells was also identified in the isolated subpopulation of CTCs. The spiral biochip identifies and addresses key challenges of the next generation CTCs isolation assay including antibody independent isolation, high sensitivity and throughput (3 mL/hr); and single-step retrieval of viable CTCs.


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