Microfluidic, marker-free isolation of circulating tumor cells from blood samples.

Journal: Nature Protocols
Published:
Abstract

The ability to isolate and analyze rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs) has the potential to further our understanding of cancer metastasis and enhance the care of cancer patients. In this protocol, we describe the procedure for isolating rare CTCs from blood samples by using tumor antigen-independent microfluidic CTC-iChip technology. The CTC-iChip uses deterministic lateral displacement, inertial focusing and magnetophoresis to sort up to 10⁷ cells/s. By using two-stage magnetophoresis and depletion antibodies against leukocytes, we achieve 3.8-log depletion of white blood cells and a 97% yield of rare cells with a sample processing rate of 8 ml of whole blood/h. The CTC-iChip is compatible with standard cytopathological and RNA-based characterization methods. This protocol describes device production, assembly, blood sample preparation, system setup and the CTC isolation process. Sorting 8 ml of blood sample requires 2 h including setup time, and chip production requires 2-5 d.

Authors
Nezihi Karabacak, Philipp Spuhler, Fabio Fachin, Eugene Lim, Vincent Pai, Emre Ozkumur, Joseph Martel, Nikola Kojic, Kyle Smith, Pin-i Chen, Jennifer Yang, Henry Hwang, Bailey Morgan, Julie Trautwein, Thomas Barber, Shannon Stott, Shyamala Maheswaran, Ravi Kapur, Daniel Haber, Mehmet Toner