Inertial focusing of circulating tumor cells in whole blood at high flow rates using the microfluidic CTCKey™ device for CTC enrichment†
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are extremely rare cells shed from tumors into the blood stream. These cells can provide valuable information about their tumor of origin and direct treatment decisions to improve patient outcomes. Current technologies isolate CTCs from a limited blood volume and often require pre-processing that leads to CTC loss, making it difficult to isolate enough CTCs to perform in-depth tumor analysis. Many inertial microfluidic devices have been developed to isolate CTCs at high flow rates, but they typically require either blood dilution, pre-processing to remove red blood cells, or a sheath buffer rather than being able to isolate cells directly from whole blood. To decrease the need for pre-processing while increasing CTC yield, we developed an inertial device, the CTCKey™, to focus CTCs in whole blood at high throughput yielding a concentrated product stream enriched for CTCs. The CTCKey™ consists of two sections to create CTC enriched blood that can be further processed using any CTC isolation device to selectively isolate the CTCs. A thorough analysis was performed using the MCF7 breast cancer cell line spiked into bovine serum albumin (BSA) solutions of varying concentrations, as well as whole blood to characterize the focusing patterns of the CTCKey™. At the optimal flow rate of 2.4 mL min−1, the CTCKey™ reduces the CTC containing blood volume by 78%; the CTCs from 1 mL of blood are now in 0.22 mL of blood. The CTCKey's™ ability to concentrate CTCs from a large original blood volume to a smaller, highly concentrated volume enables a much greater blood volume to be interrogated by downstream isolation and characterization methods despite their low volume input limitations.