4.3 Article

Classification of large circulating tumor cells isolated with ultra-high throughput microfluidic Vortex technology

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 12748-12760

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7220

Keywords

circulating tumor cells; immunofluorescent staining; rare cell enrichment; size based cell isolation; Vortex

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Program [N000141210847]
  2. NIH IMAT Program [5R33CA177456]
  3. NIH IMAT Program
  4. Komen Foundation
  5. Vortex Biosciences

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are emerging as rare but clinically significant non-invasive cellular biomarkers for cancer patient prognosis, treatment selection, and treatment monitoring. Current CTC isolation approaches, such as immunoaffinity, filtration, or size-based techniques, are often limited by throughput, purity, large output volumes, or inability to obtain viable cells for downstream analysis. For all technologies, traditional immunofluorescent staining alone has been employed to distinguish and confirm the presence of isolated CTCs among contaminating blood cells, although cells isolated by size may express vastly different phenotypes. Consequently, CTC definitions have been non-trivial, researcher-dependent, and evolving. Here we describe a complete set of objective criteria, leveraging well-established cytomorphological features of malignancy, by which we identify large CTCs. We apply the criteria to CTCs enriched from stage IV lung and breast cancer patient blood samples using the High Throughput Vortex Chip (Vortex HT), an improved microfluidic technology for the label-free, size-based enrichment and concentration of rare cells. We achieve improved capture efficiency (up to 83%), high speed of processing (8 mL/min of 10x diluted blood, or 800 mu L/min of whole blood), and high purity (avg. background of 28.8 +/- 23.6 white blood cells per mL of whole blood). We show markedly improved performance of CTC capture (84% positive test rate) in comparison to previous Vortex designs and the current FDA-approved gold standard CellSearch assay. The results demonstrate the ability to quickly collect viable and pure populations of abnormal large circulating cells unbiased by molecular characteristics, which helps uncover further heterogeneity in these cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available