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Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell

BACKGROUND: Contemporary cancer diagnostics are becoming increasing reliant upon sophisticated new molecular methods for analyzing genetic information. Limiting the scope of these new technologies is the lack of adequate solid tumor tissue samples. Patients may present with tumors that are not acces...

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Autores principales: Winer-Jones, Jessamine P., Vahidi, Behrad, Arquilevich, Norma, Fang, Cong, Ferguson, Samuel, Harkins, Darren, Hill, Cory, Klem, Erich, Pagano, Paul C., Peasley, Chrissy, Romero, Juan, Shartle, Robert, Vasko, Robert C., Strauss, William M., Dempsey, Paul W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3906064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24489774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086717
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author Winer-Jones, Jessamine P.
Vahidi, Behrad
Arquilevich, Norma
Fang, Cong
Ferguson, Samuel
Harkins, Darren
Hill, Cory
Klem, Erich
Pagano, Paul C.
Peasley, Chrissy
Romero, Juan
Shartle, Robert
Vasko, Robert C.
Strauss, William M.
Dempsey, Paul W.
author_facet Winer-Jones, Jessamine P.
Vahidi, Behrad
Arquilevich, Norma
Fang, Cong
Ferguson, Samuel
Harkins, Darren
Hill, Cory
Klem, Erich
Pagano, Paul C.
Peasley, Chrissy
Romero, Juan
Shartle, Robert
Vasko, Robert C.
Strauss, William M.
Dempsey, Paul W.
author_sort Winer-Jones, Jessamine P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Contemporary cancer diagnostics are becoming increasing reliant upon sophisticated new molecular methods for analyzing genetic information. Limiting the scope of these new technologies is the lack of adequate solid tumor tissue samples. Patients may present with tumors that are not accessible to biopsy or adequate for longitudinal monitoring. One attractive alternate source is cancer cells in the peripheral blood. These rare circulating tumor cells (CTC) require enrichment and isolation before molecular analysis can be performed. Current CTC platforms lack either the throughput or reliability to use in a clinical setting or they provide CTC samples at purities that restrict molecular access by limiting the molecular tools available. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Recent advances in magetophoresis and microfluidics have been employed to produce an automated platform called LiquidBiopsy®. This platform uses high throughput sheath flow microfluidics for the positive selection of CTC populations. Furthermore the platform quantitatively isolates cells useful for molecular methods such as detection of mutations. CTC recovery was characterized and validated with an accuracy (<20% error) and a precision (CV<25%) down to at least 9 CTC/ml. Using anti-EpCAM antibodies as the capture agent, the platform recovers 78% of MCF7 cells within the linear range. Non specific recovery of background cells is independent of target cell density and averages 55 cells/mL. 10% purity can be achieved with as low as 6 CTCs/mL and better than 1% purity can be achieved with 1 CTC/mL. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The LiquidBiopsy platform is an automated validated platform that provides high throughput molecular access to the CTC population. It can be validated and integrated into the lab flow enabling CTC enumeration as well as recovery of consistently high purity samples for molecular analysis such as quantitative PCR and Next Generation Sequencing. This tool opens the way for clinically relevant genetic profiling of CTCs.
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spelling pubmed-39060642014-01-31 Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell Winer-Jones, Jessamine P. Vahidi, Behrad Arquilevich, Norma Fang, Cong Ferguson, Samuel Harkins, Darren Hill, Cory Klem, Erich Pagano, Paul C. Peasley, Chrissy Romero, Juan Shartle, Robert Vasko, Robert C. Strauss, William M. Dempsey, Paul W. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Contemporary cancer diagnostics are becoming increasing reliant upon sophisticated new molecular methods for analyzing genetic information. Limiting the scope of these new technologies is the lack of adequate solid tumor tissue samples. Patients may present with tumors that are not accessible to biopsy or adequate for longitudinal monitoring. One attractive alternate source is cancer cells in the peripheral blood. These rare circulating tumor cells (CTC) require enrichment and isolation before molecular analysis can be performed. Current CTC platforms lack either the throughput or reliability to use in a clinical setting or they provide CTC samples at purities that restrict molecular access by limiting the molecular tools available. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Recent advances in magetophoresis and microfluidics have been employed to produce an automated platform called LiquidBiopsy®. This platform uses high throughput sheath flow microfluidics for the positive selection of CTC populations. Furthermore the platform quantitatively isolates cells useful for molecular methods such as detection of mutations. CTC recovery was characterized and validated with an accuracy (<20% error) and a precision (CV<25%) down to at least 9 CTC/ml. Using anti-EpCAM antibodies as the capture agent, the platform recovers 78% of MCF7 cells within the linear range. Non specific recovery of background cells is independent of target cell density and averages 55 cells/mL. 10% purity can be achieved with as low as 6 CTCs/mL and better than 1% purity can be achieved with 1 CTC/mL. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The LiquidBiopsy platform is an automated validated platform that provides high throughput molecular access to the CTC population. It can be validated and integrated into the lab flow enabling CTC enumeration as well as recovery of consistently high purity samples for molecular analysis such as quantitative PCR and Next Generation Sequencing. This tool opens the way for clinically relevant genetic profiling of CTCs. Public Library of Science 2014-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3906064/ /pubmed/24489774 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086717 Text en © 2014 Winer-Jones et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Winer-Jones, Jessamine P.
Vahidi, Behrad
Arquilevich, Norma
Fang, Cong
Ferguson, Samuel
Harkins, Darren
Hill, Cory
Klem, Erich
Pagano, Paul C.
Peasley, Chrissy
Romero, Juan
Shartle, Robert
Vasko, Robert C.
Strauss, William M.
Dempsey, Paul W.
Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title_full Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title_fullStr Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title_full_unstemmed Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title_short Circulating Tumor Cells: Clinically Relevant Molecular Access Based on a Novel CTC Flow Cell
title_sort circulating tumor cells: clinically relevant molecular access based on a novel ctc flow cell
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3906064/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24489774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086717
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