Abstract

In our previous study, a microfluidic system was developed based on podoplanin detection for capturing circulating tumor cells (CTCs), derived from malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM). However, non-epithelioid MPM shows low podoplanin protein expression compared with that in epithelioid MPM; thus, some CTC populations may be missed. To overcome this limitation, a new CTC-detection chip was developed by combining the conventional podoplanin antibody (clone: NZ-1.2) with an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeted antibody (cetuximab). The cell-capture efficiency of the Cocktail-chip reached 100% in all the histological MPM cell lines. The median CTC-counts from 19 patients with MPM (epithelioid/non-epithelioid: 10/9) with the NZ-1.2- and Cocktail-chips were 1 and 3 (P=0.311) in 1 ml peripheral blood, 1.5 and 2 (P=0.332) in epithelioid MPM, and 1 and 3 (P=0.106) in non-epithelioid MPM, respectively. Overall, the Cocktail-chip showed an improved ability to detect more CTCs in patients with non-epithelioid MPM compared with that in the conventional NZ-1.2-chip, showing non-significant, but higher CTC detection. Furthermore, CTC-counts, determined using the Cocktail-chip were significantly correlated with the clinical stage of non-epithelioid MPM. In epithelioid MPM, the Cocktail-chip achieved a CTC-detection efficiency equivalent to that in the conventional NZ-1.2-chip. The Cocktail-chip enabled sensitive CTC detection of all histological MPM, including the non-epithelioid subtype, which may provide a foundation for the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of MPM progression.

Highlights

  • Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are derived from the primary tumor and circulate in the peripheral blood [1]

  • By combining with cetux‐ imab (Cocktail‐chip), the cell‐capture efficiency was higher in non‐epithelioid malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM)‐derived CTCs compared with that in the conventional NZ‐1.2‐chip, which was designed to only detect podoplanin

  • epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM)‐dependent methods may not be applicable to the isolation of non‐epithelial tumor cells [15], and CTCs in MPM have not been fully investigated so far

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Summary

Introduction

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are derived from the primary tumor and circulate in the peripheral blood [1]. As CellSearch is an epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM)‐dependent cell‐capture system, it fails to identify CTCs in non‐epithelial tumors with low EpCAM expression, such as malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) [12]. To overcome this diag‐ nostic gap, in our previous studies, a new microfluidic device system, named as the ‘Universal CTC‐Chip’, was developed, which enables EpCAM‐independent cell capture by attaching various antibodies to a large number of microposts on the chip surface [13,14]. Our previous study showed that CTCs were detected in 92.3% (12/13 patients) of epithelioid MPM cases compared with that

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