DocumentCode
2208089
Title
Micro-patterned surface for efficient capturing of circulating tumor cells
Author
Thomas, Antony ; Chi-mon Chen ; Shu Yang ; Xuanhong Chen ; Liu, Yaling
Author_Institution
Bioeng. Program, Lehigh Univ., Bethlehem, PA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
16-18 March 2012
Firstpage
416
Lastpage
417
Abstract
This work aims to design, fabricate, and characterize a micro-patterned surface that will be integrated into microfluidic devices to enhance particle and rare cell capture efficiency. Capture of ultralow concentration of circulating tumor cells in a blood sample is of vital importance for early diagnostics of cancer diseases. Despite the significant progress achieved in development of cell capture techniques, the enhancement in capture efficiency is still limited and often accompanied with drawbacks such as low throughput, low selectivity, pre-diluting requirement, and cell viability issues. The goal of this work is to design a biomimetic surface that could significantly enhance particle/cell capture efficacy through computational modeling, surface patterning, and microfluidic integration and testing. A PDMS surface with microscale ripples is functionalized with epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) antibody to capture prostate cancer PC3 cells. Our microfluidic chip with micropatterns has shown significantly higher cell capture efficiency and selectivity compared to the chips with plane surface or classical herringbone-grooves.
Keywords
adhesion; bioMEMS; biomechanics; biomedical equipment; biomimetics; blood; cancer; cellular biophysics; microfabrication; microfluidics; nanofabrication; nanopatterning; patient diagnosis; tumours; biomimetic surface; blood sample; cancer disease diagnosis; capture efficiency enhancement; cell capture techniques; circulating tumor cells; classical herringbone-grooves; computational modeling; epithelial cell adhesion molecule; microfluidic chip; microfluidic devices; microfluidic integration; microfluidic testing; micropatterned surface; micropatterns; microscale ripples; particle-cell capture efficacy; prostate cancer PC3 cells; rare cell capture efficiency; surface patterning; surface plane; tumor cell circulation; Educational institutions; Materials; Microfluidics; Surface waves; Testing; Tumors; USA Councils; circulating tumor cells; microfluidic device; ripple surface;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Bioengineering Conference (NEBEC), 2012 38th Annual Northeast
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
ISSN
2160-7001
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1141-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NEBC.2012.6207141
Filename
6207141
Link To Document