The systematic study of circulating tumor cell isolation using lithographic microfilters

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) disseminated into peripheral blood from a primary, or metastatic, tumor can be used for early detection, diagnosis and monitoring of solid malignancies. CTC isolation by size exclusion techniques have long interested researchers as a simple broad based approach, which...

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Veröffentlicht in:RSC advances 2014-01, Vol.9 (9), p.4334-4342
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Daniel L, Zhu, Peixuan, Makarova, Olga V, Martin, Stuart S, Charpentier, Monica, Chumsri, Saranya, Li, Shuhong, Amstutz, Platte, Tang, Cha-Mei
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container_end_page 4342
container_issue 9
container_start_page 4334
container_title RSC advances
container_volume 9
creator Adams, Daniel L
Zhu, Peixuan
Makarova, Olga V
Martin, Stuart S
Charpentier, Monica
Chumsri, Saranya
Li, Shuhong
Amstutz, Platte
Tang, Cha-Mei
description Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) disseminated into peripheral blood from a primary, or metastatic, tumor can be used for early detection, diagnosis and monitoring of solid malignancies. CTC isolation by size exclusion techniques have long interested researchers as a simple broad based approach, which is methodologically diverse for use in both genomic and protein detection platforms. Though a variety of these microfiltration systems are employed academically and commercially, the limited ability to easily alter microfilter designs has hindered the optimization for CTC capture. To overcome this problem, we studied a unique photo-definable material with a scalable and mass producible photolithographic fabrication method. We use this fabrication method to systematically study and optimize the parameters necessary for CTC isolation using a microfiltration approach, followed by a comparison to a "standard" filtration membrane. We demonstrate that properly designed microfilters can capture MCF-7 cancer cells at rate of 98 ± 2% if they consist of uniform patterned distributions, ≥160 000 pores, and 7 μm pore diameters.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c3ra46839a
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source Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-
subjects Blood
genomics
metastasis
microfiltration
monitoring
neoplasm cells
neoplasms
title The systematic study of circulating tumor cell isolation using lithographic microfilters
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