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Development of microfluidic-based analytical methodology for studying the effects of chemotherapy agents on cancer tissue

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by D Sylvester, S Hattersley, N Stafford, Stephen Haswell, J Greenman
Whilst a multitude of techniques have been employed to study the biology of tumour tissue and its response to chemotherapeutic reagents, most current methodologies do not capture the sophistication of the in vivo environment. Microfluidics however offers the ability to maintain and interrogate primary tissue samples in an environment with biomimetic flow characteristics. In this study head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) tumour biopsies have been used to investigate the performance of a microfluidic device for generating clinically-useful information. The response of fresh and cryogenically-frozen primary HNSCC or metastatic lymph node samples to chemotherapy drugs (cisplatin, 5-flurouracil or docetaxel), alone and in combination, were monitored for both proliferation (water-soluble tetrazolium salt metabolism) and cell death biomarker release (lactate dehydrogenase, LDH) “off-chip”. The frozen tissue showed no significant difference in terms of either proliferation or LDH release in comparison with the matched fresh samples. Administration of all drugs caused cell death, in a dose-response manner, with the combination showing the greatest amount of cytotoxicity particularly at days 8 and 9; correlating well with published clinical data. The system described here offers an innovative method for studying the tumour microenvironment in vitro and, through incorporation of relevant analytical modules, provides the basis of a pre-clinical device that can be used to define personalised treatment regimens.

History

Journal

Current analytical chemistry

Volume

9

Issue

1

Pagination

2 - 8

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1573-4110

eISSN

1875-6727

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Bentham Science Publishers