Clinical-scale cell-surface-marker independent acoustic microfluidic enrichment of tumor cells from blood Journal Article


Authors: Magnusson, C.; Augustsson, P.; Lenshof, A.; Ceder, Y.; Laurell, T.; Lilja, H.
Article Title: Clinical-scale cell-surface-marker independent acoustic microfluidic enrichment of tumor cells from blood
Abstract: Enumeration of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) predicts overall survival and treatment response in metastatic cancer, but as many commercialized assays isolate CTCs positive for epithelial cell markers alone, CTCs with little or no epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) expression stay undetected. Therefore, CTC enrichment and isolation by label-free methods based on biophysical rather than biochemical properties could provide a more representative spectrum of CTCs. Here, we report on a clinical-scale automated acoustic microfluidic platform processing 5 mL of erythrocyte-depleted paraformaldehyde (PFA)-fixed blood (diluted 1:2) at a flow rate of 75 μL/min, recovering 43/50 (86 ± 2.3%) breast cancer cell line cells (MCF7), with 0.11% cancer cell purity and 162-fold enrichment in close to 2 h based on intrinsic biophysical cell properties. Adjustments of the voltage settings aimed at higher cancer cell purity in the central outlet provided 0.72% cancer cell purity and 1445-fold enrichment that resulted in 62 ± 8.7% cancer cell recovery. Similar rates of cancer-cell recovery, cancer-cell purity, and fold-enrichment were seen with both prostate cancer (DU145, PC3) and breast cancer (MCF7) cell line cells. We identified eosinophil granulocytes as the predominant white blood cell (WBC) contaminant (85%) in the enriched cancer-cell fraction. Processing of viable cancer cells in erythrocyte-depleted blood provided slightly reduced results as to fixed cells (77% cancer cells in the enriched cancer cell fraction, with 0.2% WBC contamination). We demonstrate feasibility of enriching either PFA-fixed or viable cancer cells with a clinical-scale acoustic microfluidic platform that can be adjusted to meet requirements for either high cancer-cell recovery or higher purity and can process 5 mL blood samples in close to 2 h. © 2017 American Chemical Society.
Keywords: treatment response; cytology; blood; cell culture; tumors; cell surface marker; microfluidics; cell membranes; molecular biology; cell adhesion; circulating tumor cells; diseases; cells; recovery; breast cancer cells; acetal resins; biochemical properties; fixed platforms; epithelial cell adhesion molecules; metastatic cancers; microfluidic platforms
Journal Title: Analytical Chemistry
Volume: 89
Issue: 22
ISSN: 0003-2700
Publisher: American Chemical Society  
Date Published: 2017-11-21
Start Page: 11954
End Page: 11961
Language: English
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b01458
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5698115
PUBMED: 29087172
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 January 2018 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Hans Gosta Lilja
    343 Lilja