The Hunt for Circulating Tumor Cells: CTC Detection for Oncology Research

Cell Analysis
Aug 09, 2023  |  4 min read

Metastasis is one of the main obstacles in treating cancer. Studying circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and CTC clusters at the single-cell level can help us understand the underlying mechanisms and develop better therapeutic strategies for patients. Automated solutions can vastly simplify protocols for CTC isolation for molecular characterization at the single-cell level.


This article is posted on our Science Snippets Blog  

 Teal Circulating Tumor Cell on Grey Background

What are circulating tumor cells?

CTCs are cells that break away from the primary tumor and enter the bloodstream. Once in the blood, CTCs can adapt to the microenvironment of additional sites, forming a new tumor. This process, called metastasis, is responsible for over 90% of cancer-related deaths and is an active area of research.

To understand the mechanisms behind cancer metastasis, scientists isolate CTCs to study their functional, biochemical, and biophysical properties. Understanding how CTCs escape from immune surveillance and hijack other processes in their favor is the first step in developing new therapeutic strategies to block further spread.


Finding the needle in a haystack

CTCs are obtained through a simple blood draw called “liquid biopsy”. A liquid biopsy is a non-invasive approach that is complementary to a solid tumor biopsy in providing data to clinicians. It is used to monitor tumor characteristics in real-time, including inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity.

In practice, CTC isolation and characterization is technically very hard because the number of CTCs is miniscule compared to the loads of blood cells. For example, in a one milliliter patient sample you may have one CTC in a background of 107 white blood cells. This is a problem—leukocyte contamination interferes with downstream analysis of CTC-specific transcripts, and other markers, making CTC enrichment necessary.

CTC enrichment and limitations

A typical CTC isolation and analysis workflow has the following steps:

  1. Blood draw and sample processing
  2. CTC enrichment and staining
  3. Imaging and isolation of pure CTCs
  4. Single-CTC characterization

A wide range of analytical methods have been developed for CTC detection, enrichment, and isolation. These methods take advantage of CTC-specific properties like surface marker expression or physical features. After enrichment, CTCs are stained for detection by microscopy and single-cell isolation.

CTC enrichment methods are not perfect, so there is always some carryover of contaminating cells, which interfere with downstream studies. Automated technologies for single-cell isolation that can accurately pick out single CTCs or CTC clusters from enriched cell suspensions can offer immense benefits.

Benefits of automated rare-cell isolation

Methods for isolating single cells can be too rough. For example, vacuum-based methods can damage cells due to shear stress, while microdissection systems generate excessive heat. Contrary to these, automated solutions really speed up the process and reduce excessive handling of delicate cells.

The CellCelector, for example, scans cells in brightfield, phase contrast or fluorescence channels to find the cells of interest. Then, it uses liquid buffered single-use glass capillaries to gently aspirate the cells with extremely high precision down to the nanoliter range. The process can be fully automated, making it much more reliable than manual protocols.

A flexible system for single CTC analysis

With the CellCelector system you can isolate 100% pure single CTCs or CTC clusters from samples processed using any of the common enrichment techniques and deposit the collected cells into a destination vessel for the next step. Importantly, the cells don’t spend more than 10 seconds inside the capillary, leaving you with healthier, happier cells.

Visit the CellCelector page to learn how this automated system for single-cell isolation provides flexibility, speed, and complete traceability for CTC analysis in oncology applications.

Related Content

eBook

Automated Cell Selection and Retrieval Opens a Universe of Possibiliti...

Chapters highlight the workflow challenges of isolating circulating tumor cells (CTCs) following enrichment, isolating single clones for cell-line dev...

Application Guide

CellCelector Flex for Automated Image-based Single Cell Isolation &...

Understanding tumors on the single cell level, and unraveling tumor heterogeneity, may have a huge impact on cancer survivability.

Application Note

Integrated Workflow Enabling Spatial Single-Cell Genomics

Understand how to spatially locate a cell of interest, capture it and amplify the genome for analysis.

Related Blog Posts

Cell Line Development
May 18, 2023 | 10 min read

Demystifying the Art of Stem Cell Isolation and Picking

Human stem cells are valuable due to their high self-renewal and differentiation ability, but working with them isn’t easy. Learn how to isolate viable, single stem cells easily. 

Cell Line Development
Jan 27, 2023 | 10 min read

Why Automation is Outpacing Traditional Methods for Single-Cell Cloning

While fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) and limiting dilution have traditionally been used for single cell cloning, many are turning to automated, image-based solutions.

Cell Line Development
Nov 09, 2022 | 10 min read

Automated Cell Selection and Retrieval Platform Opens a Universe of Possibilities 

Single-cell selection nearly tops the list when it comes to laborious manual procedures. Learn how one automated cell picker is freeing researchers’ time to develop life-saving therapies.