Abstract

Cell concentration is a critical process in biological assays and clinical diagnostics for the pre-treatment of extremely rare disease-related cells. The conventional technique for sample preconcentration and centrifugation has the limitations of a batch process requiring expensive and large equipment. Therefore, a high-throughput continuous cell concentration technique needs to be developed. However, in single-pass operation, the required concentration ratio is hard to achieve. In this study, we propose a closed-loop continuous cell concentration system using a viscoelastic non-Newtonian fluid. For miniaturized and integrated systems, two piezoelectric pumps were adopted. The pumping capability generated by a piezoelectric pump in a microfluidic channel was evaluated depending on the applied voltage, frequency, sample viscosity, and channel length. The concentration performance of the device was evaluated using 13 μm particles and white blood cells (WBCs) with different channel lengths and voltages. In the closed-loop system, the focused cells collected at the center outlet were sent back to the inlet, while the buffer solution was removed to the side outlets. Finally, to expand the clinical applicability of our closed-loop system, WBCs in lysed blood samples with 70% hematocrit and prostate cancer cells in urine samples were used. Using the closed-loop system, WBCs were concentrated by ~63.4 ± 0.8-fold within 20 min to a final volume of 160 μL using 10 mL of lysed blood sample with 70% hematocrit (~3 cP). In addition, prostate cancer cells in 10 mL urine samples were concentrated by ~64.1-fold within ~11 min due to low viscosity (~1 cP).

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn biological assays and clinical diagnostics, sample preconcentration is a critical process for the pre-treatment of extremely rare disease-related cells to improve detection sensitivity [1]

  • As shownwith in the schematic in Figure closed‐loop viscoelastic the device consisted of fluid four is parallel microfluidic a high

  • 1, the device consisted of four parallel microfluidic channels with a high

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Summary

Introduction

In biological assays and clinical diagnostics, sample preconcentration is a critical process for the pre-treatment of extremely rare disease-related cells to improve detection sensitivity [1]. Centrifugation is the most widely used method to enrich cells into smaller volumes. The centrifugation process is a batch operation, requiring expensive and bulky apparatuses, and which is inadequate for use at the point of care. Cells can be physically damaged due to the mechanical shear force exerted on the cells during centrifugation [2,3]. A large volume reduction requires multiple centrifugation steps in a series.

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