4.7 Article

Hybrid double-spiral microfluidic chip for RBC-lysis-free enrichment of rare cells from whole blood

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 22, Issue 22, Pages 4418-4429

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2lc00713d

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This study developed a novel cancer cell separation chip that can quickly process cancer cells from whole blood without the need for RBC lysis and centrifugation. The method achieves high separation precision and throughput, making it suitable for automated clinical analysis of rare CTCs.
Drug selection and treatment monitoring via minimally invasive liquid biopsy using circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are expected to be realized in the near future. For clinical applications of CTCs, simple, high-throughput, single-step CTC isolation from whole blood without red blood cell (RBC) lysis and centrifugation remains a crucial challenge. In this study, we developed a novel cancer cell separation chip, hybrid double-spiral chip, that involves the serial combination of two different Dean flow fractionation (DFF) separation modes of half and full Dean cycles, which is the hybrid DFF separation mode for ultra-high-throughput blood processing at high precision and size-resolution separation. The chip allows fast processing of 5 mL whole blood within 30 min without RBC lysis and centrifugation. RBC and white blood cell (WBC) depletion rates of over 99.9% and 99%, respectively, were achieved. The average recovery rate of spiked A549 cancer cells was 87% with as low as 200 cells in 5 mL blood. The device can achieve serial reduction in the number of cells from approximately 10(10) cells of whole blood to 10(8) cells, and subsequently to an order of 10(6) cells. The developed method can be combined with measurements of all recovered cells using imaging flow cytometry. As proof of concept, CTCs were successfully enriched and enumerated from the blood of metastatic breast cancer patients (N = 10, 1-69 CTCs per 5 mL) and metastatic prostate cancer patients (N = 10, 1-39 CTCs per 5 mL). We believe that the developed method will be beneficial for automated clinical analysis of rare CTCs from whole blood.

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