Antibody mediated cotton-archetypal substrate for enumeration of circulating tumor cells and chemotherapy outcome in 3D tumors†
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are distinct cancer biomarkers established in clinical settings for early cancer detection, metastasis progression, and minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring. Despite numerous advances, the comprehensive molecular characterization of CTCs is extremely challenging owing to their rarity and heterogeneity. Here, we present a novel cotton microfluidic substrate (CMS) as an innovative biomedical matrix that efficiently isolates CTCs while facilitating in vitro CTC expansion to enable a further downstream analysis of these rare cells. CMS enabled static and dynamic isolation of cells from the MCF-7 cancer cell line, as well as from head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients' blood and the cell capture efficiencies were further compared with a clinically regulated OncoDiscover® Liquid Biopsy Test. Further, CMS acted as a matrix on which the captured cancer cells were grown in 3D tumor models for studying anti-cancer drug efficacy and multi-drug resistance (MDR) mechanisms. The design of the CMS employed two different surface chemistries, flattened and nanostructured surfaces, each conjugated to anti-EpCAM antibodies to evaluate the CTC capture efficiency and 3D tumor growth dynamics. The nanostructured surface was highly efficient for capturing CTCs and promoted 3D tumor spheroid formation with a 5-fold increase in size from day 03 to day 10 of culture. Moreover, when treated with an anti-cancer drug, cisplatin, an almost 1/2 reduction in tumor size was achieved within 24 hours, followed by a cytostatic threshold and eventual acquisition of drug resistance within 3 days. Conclusively, the CMS matrix exhibits potential for further development of “tissue on chip” and “point-of-care” medical devices in cancer diagnostics, and chemo-therapeutic efficacy evaluations in both drug discovery and development.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Lab on a Chip HOT Articles 2022