Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation

Abstract Circulating tumor cells have emerged as biomarkers for estimating the tumor burden and metastatic potential of cancer patients. However, to date, most of studies and applications of circulating tumor cells have been conducted and applied to epithelial cancers such as breast, colorectal, and...

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Main Authors: Yoon-Tae Kang, Young Jun Kim, Tae Hee Lee, Young-Ho Cho, Hee Jin Chang, Hyun-Moo Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2018-10-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33464-1
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spelling doaj-ea51039fd43d40148603de6f771df1412020-12-08T05:06:55ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222018-10-018111210.1038/s41598-018-33464-1Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block FormationYoon-Tae Kang0Young Jun Kim1Tae Hee Lee2Young-Ho Cho3Hee Jin Chang4Hyun-Moo Lee5Cell Bench Research Center, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyCell Bench Research Center, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyCell Bench Research Center, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyCell Bench Research Center, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyResearch Institute and Hospital, National Cancer CenterSamsung Medical CenterAbstract Circulating tumor cells have emerged as biomarkers for estimating the tumor burden and metastatic potential of cancer patients. However, to date, most of studies and applications of circulating tumor cells have been conducted and applied to epithelial cancers such as breast, colorectal, and prostate tumor. The only FDA-cleared method, CellSearch, makes use of antibody against epithelial surface protein expressed on CTCs, thus obstructing wide application for various cancers with non-epithelial and semi-epithelial characteristics including renal cell carcinoma. Due to rarity and ambiguity of CTCs, designed experiment including non-biased CTC isolation and subsequent cytopathological study for finding applicable immunomarkers are urgently needed for clinical use of CTCs for less-studied cancers. Here, in order to construct the fundamental step for CTC diagnosis without limitation of its epithelial characteristics, we present the simple and novel method which incorporate both label-free CTC isolation and pathological study using hydrogel-based cell block formation. Six cell lines from lung, ovarian, kidney cancers were used to make cell block and analyzed by conventional immunocytochemical staining method to find the candidate markers for CTC. Especially for renal cancer, the physically isolated CTCs were further immunocytochemically examined with the screened candidate markers by cell block construction, and verified their clinical utility using blood samples from patients with renal cell carcinoma. This comprehensive study demonstrates that the present approach can be used to find the potential markers for any type of cancers regardless of their epithelial characteristics and isolate the specific type of CTCs in label-free manners.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33464-1Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC)Cell BlockCytopathological StudiesICC StainingRenal Cell Carcinoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yoon-Tae Kang
Young Jun Kim
Tae Hee Lee
Young-Ho Cho
Hee Jin Chang
Hyun-Moo Lee
spellingShingle Yoon-Tae Kang
Young Jun Kim
Tae Hee Lee
Young-Ho Cho
Hee Jin Chang
Hyun-Moo Lee
Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
Scientific Reports
Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC)
Cell Block
Cytopathological Studies
ICC Staining
Renal Cell Carcinoma
author_facet Yoon-Tae Kang
Young Jun Kim
Tae Hee Lee
Young-Ho Cho
Hee Jin Chang
Hyun-Moo Lee
author_sort Yoon-Tae Kang
title Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
title_short Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
title_full Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
title_fullStr Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
title_full_unstemmed Cytopathological Study of the Circulating Tumor Cells filtered from the Cancer Patients’ Blood using Hydrogel-based Cell Block Formation
title_sort cytopathological study of the circulating tumor cells filtered from the cancer patients’ blood using hydrogel-based cell block formation
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Circulating tumor cells have emerged as biomarkers for estimating the tumor burden and metastatic potential of cancer patients. However, to date, most of studies and applications of circulating tumor cells have been conducted and applied to epithelial cancers such as breast, colorectal, and prostate tumor. The only FDA-cleared method, CellSearch, makes use of antibody against epithelial surface protein expressed on CTCs, thus obstructing wide application for various cancers with non-epithelial and semi-epithelial characteristics including renal cell carcinoma. Due to rarity and ambiguity of CTCs, designed experiment including non-biased CTC isolation and subsequent cytopathological study for finding applicable immunomarkers are urgently needed for clinical use of CTCs for less-studied cancers. Here, in order to construct the fundamental step for CTC diagnosis without limitation of its epithelial characteristics, we present the simple and novel method which incorporate both label-free CTC isolation and pathological study using hydrogel-based cell block formation. Six cell lines from lung, ovarian, kidney cancers were used to make cell block and analyzed by conventional immunocytochemical staining method to find the candidate markers for CTC. Especially for renal cancer, the physically isolated CTCs were further immunocytochemically examined with the screened candidate markers by cell block construction, and verified their clinical utility using blood samples from patients with renal cell carcinoma. This comprehensive study demonstrates that the present approach can be used to find the potential markers for any type of cancers regardless of their epithelial characteristics and isolate the specific type of CTCs in label-free manners.
topic Circulating Tumor Cells (CTC)
Cell Block
Cytopathological Studies
ICC Staining
Renal Cell Carcinoma
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33464-1
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