Inertial Focusing for Tumor Antigen–Dependent and –Independent Sorting of Rare Circulating Tumor Cells
Massachusetts General Hospital · Center for Systems Biology · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are shed into the bloodstream from primary and metastatic tumor deposits. Their isolation and analysis hold great promise for the early detection of invasive cancer and the management of advanced disease, but technological hurdles have limited their broad clinical utility. We describe an inertial focusing-enhanced microfluidic CTC capture platform, termed "CTC-iChip," that is capable of sorting rare CTCs from whole blood at 10(7) cells/s. Most importantly, the iChip is capable of isolating CTCs using strategies that are either dependent or independent of tumor membrane epitopes, and thus applicable to virtually all cancers. We specifically demonstrate the use of the iChip in an…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
30- EOEmre OzkumurCorresponding
Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology
- AMAjay M. ShahCorresponding
Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology
- JCJordan C. Ciciliano
Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
- BLBenjamin L. Emmink
Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology
- DTDavid T. Miyamoto
Harvard University, Massachusetts General Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Circulating tumor cell
- Cancer
- Melanoma
- Cancer research
- Medicine
- Liquid biopsy
- Prostate cancer
- Pathology