4.8 Article

An Implantable Magnetic Vascular Scaffold for Circulating Tumor Cell Removal In Vivo

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 50, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202207870

Keywords

adhesion repertoires; bioinspired ultrastructure; circulating tumor cell removal; magnetothermal response; vascular-like integrated trapped devices

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2022YFC2403500, 2020YFA0210800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22225401]
  3. Science and Technology Innovation Program of Hunan Province [2020RC4017]
  4. Youth Foundation of Hunan Province [2022JJ40147]

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This article presents a vascular-like integrated trapped device (ITD) with adhesive sites and wireless magnetothermal response for removing highly metastatic tumor cells. The device shows good performance in capture efficiency and cell death, and it can prevent vascular blockage and induce potential vascular regeneration.
An integrated trapped device (ITD) capable of removal of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can assuage or even prevent metastasis. However, adhesion repertoires are ordinarily neglected in the design of ITDs, possibly leading to the omission of highly metastatic CTC and treatment failure. Here a vascular-like ITD with adhesive sites and wireless magnetothermal response to remove highly metastatic CTC in vivo is presented. Such a vascular-like ITD comprises circumferential well-aligned fibers and artificial adhesion repertoires and is optimized for magnetothermal integration. Continuous and repeated capture in a dynamic environment increases capture efficiency over time. Meanwhile, the heat generation of the ITD leads to the capture of CTC death owing to cell heat sensitivity. Furthermore, the constructed bioinspired ultrastructure of the ITD prevents vascular blockage and induces potential vascular regeneration. Overall, this work defines an extendable strategy for constructing adhesion repertoires against intravascular shear forces, provides a vascular-like ITD for reducing CTC counts, and is expected to alleviate the risk of cancer recurrence.

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