A device that filters cancer cells from human blood using sound could help to identify tumour cells that have spread.
Finding tumour cells in the blood indicates a cancer has metastasised â but the molecular markers that are used to identify the cells can modify them and make them unsuitable for studying how treatment is proceeding and for performing basic cancer research.
So Itziar GonzĂĄlez at the Institute for Acoustics in Madrid, Spain, and colleagues developed an alternative: a tiny vibrating plastic chamber through which a blood sample flows. The vibrations create a standing wave that deflects cells in the blood to a different degree depending on their size. Tumour cells are often larger than blood cells and so collect in a different region of the device. The process does not alter the cells.
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The prototype can reliably differentiate cancer cells 70 per cent of the time, and a modified version that exposes the blood to the acoustic waves for a longer amount of time should be able to differentiate a cancer cell from a normal cell 95 per cent of the time.
Thatâs important, because identifying just two or three tumour cells in a typical 7-millilitre sample of blood is enough to determine that a cancer is metastasising, GonzĂĄlez says. Miss that small number of cells because of problems with the sensitivity of a device and âwe wonât be able to make that diagnosisâ, says GonzĂĄlez.
at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, thinks the technique has potential. âNot labelling the cells is an advantageâ for cultivating and studying them, he says.
GonzĂĄlez presented the work at the in Lucerne, Switzerland, last month.