News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel

News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel
Sign In

New Discovery by Massachusetts General Hospital May Help Medical Laboratories Preserve Blood for DNA Analysis, Thus Allowing Isolation of CTCs up to 72 Hours after Collection

Using GPIIb/IIIa inhibition, and ion chelation, researchers have developed a “universal” method for preserving blood up to 72 hours while keeping it viable for advanced rare-cell applications

Through microfluidics and automation, clinical laboratories and anatomic pathologists have been able to detect ever-smaller quantities of biomarkers and other indicators of chronic disease.

However, preserving sample quality is an essential part of analytical accuracy. This is particularly true in precision oncology and other specialties where isolating rare cells (aka, low abundance cells), such as circulating tumor cells (CTCs), is a key component to obtaining information and running diagnostics.

Publishing their finding in Nature, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Engineering in Medicine (MGH-CEM) have developed a whole blood stabilization method that is ideal for rare-cell applications, and which preserves sample integrity for up to 72 hours.

Should further testing validate their findings and methodology, this change could allow greater use of central laboratories and other remote testing facilities that previously would not be available due to distance and sample travel time.

Keeping Blood Alive Is Not Easy

“At Mass. General, we have the luxury of being so integrated with the clinical team that we can process blood specimens in the lab typically within an hour or two after they are drawn,” stated lead author Keith Wong, PhD, former Research Fellow, MGH-CEM, and now Senior Scientist at Rubius Therapeutics, Boston, in a Mass General press release. “But to make these liquid biopsy technologies routine lab tests for the rest of the world, we need ways to keep blood alive for much longer than several hours, since these assays are best performed in central laboratories for reasons of cost-effectiveness and reproducibility.”

Study authors Wong and co-lead author Shannon Tessier, PhD, Investigator at MGH-CEM, noted that current FDA-approved blood stabilization methods for CTC assays use chemical fixation—a process that can result in degradation of sensitive biomolecules and kill the cells within the sample.

Without stabilization, however, breakdown of red cells, activation of leukocytes (white blood cells), and clot formation can render the results of analyzing a sample useless, or create issues with increasingly sensitive equipment used to run assays and diagnostics.

“We wanted to slow down the biological clock as much as possible by using hypothermia, but that is not as simple as it sounds,” says Tessier. “Low temperature is a powerful means to decrease metabolism, but a host of unwanted side effects occur at the same time.”

Researchers started by using hypothermic treatments to slow degradation and cell death. However, this created another obstacle—aggressive platelet coagulation. By introducing glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, they found they could minimize this aggregation.

Keith Wong, PhD (left), a former Research Fellow, MGH-CEM, and now Senior Scientist at Rubius Therapeutics in Boston; and Shannon Tessier, PhD (right), Investigator at MGH-CEM, co-authored a study to develop a whole blood stabilization method that preserves sample integrity for up to 72 hours, making it possible to transport blood specimens further distances to central clinical laboratories for processing. (Photo copyrights: LinkedIn.)

Prior to microfluidic processing of their test samples, researchers applied a brief calcium chelation treatment. The result was efficient sorting of rare CTCs from blood drawn up to 72 hours prior, while keeping RNA intact and retaining cell viability.

“The critical achievement here,” says Tessier, “Is that the isolated tumor cells contain high-quality RNA that is suitable for demanding molecular assays, such as single-cell qPCR, droplet digital PCR, and RNA sequencing.”

Their testing involved 10 patients with metastatic prostate cancer. Sample integrity was verified by comparing CTC analysis results between fresh samples and preserved samples from the same patients using MGH-CEM’s own microfluidic CTC-iChip device.

Results showed a 92% agreement across 12 cancer-specific gene transcripts. For AR-V7, their preservation method achieved 100% agreement. “This is very exciting for clinicians,” declared David Miyamoto, MD, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in the press release. “AR-V7 mRNA can only be detected using CTCs and not with circulating tumor DNA or other cell-free assays.”

Methodology Concerns and Future Confirmations

“Moving forward, an extremely exciting area in precision oncology is the establishment of patient-specific CTC cultures and xenograft models for drug susceptibility,” the study authors noted. “The lack of robust methods to preserve viable CTCs is a major roadblock towards this Holy Grail in liquid biopsy. In our preliminary experiments, we found that spiked tumor cells in blood remain highly viable (>80%) after 72 hours of hypothermic preservation.”

Despite this, they also acknowledge limitations on their current findings. The first is the need for larger-scale validation, as their testing involved a 10-patient sample group.

Second, they note that further studies will be needed to “more completely characterize whole-transcriptome alterations as a result of preservation, and to what extent they can be stabilized through other means, such as further cooling (e.g., non-freezing sub-zero temperatures) or metabolic depression.”

Researchers also note that their approach has multiple advantages for regulatory approval and further testing—GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors are both low-cost and already approved for clinical use, implementation requires no modification of existing isolation assays, and cold chain protocols are already in place allowing for easy adaptation to fit the needs of pathology groups, medical laboratories, and other diagnostics providers handling samples.

While still in its early stages, the methods introduced by the researchers at MGH-CEM show potential to allow both the facilities collecting samples and the clinical laboratories processing them greater flexibility and increased accuracy, as high-sensitivity assays and diagnostics continue to power the push toward personalized medicine and expand laboratory menus across the industry.

—Jon Stone

Related Information:

Whole Blood Stabilization for the Microfluidic Isolation and Molecular Characterization of Circulating Tumor Cells

Improved Blood Stabilization Should Expand Use of Circulating Tumor Cell Profiling

Genentech Scientists Zero In on “Liquid Biopsies” as a Way to Replace Tissue Biopsies in Breast Cancer

University of Michigan Researchers Use “Labyrinth” Chip Design in Clinical Trial to Capture Circulating Tumor Cells of Different Cancer Types

Super-Fast Microscope Captures Circulating Tumor Cells with High Sensitivity and Resolution in Real Time

University of Texas Researchers Develop New Techniques in Genetic Testing to Improve Clinical Laboratory Results through RNA

Innovative technological advances could potentially provide clinical laboratories, pathology groups, and medical researchers with improved methodologies for designing, performing, and analyzing lab tests that use genetic information

Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) have developed an innovative new enzyme that promises to improve the methods and tools used by pathology groups and clinical laboratories when conducting genetic testing.

The enzyme enables the reproduction of large quantities of Ribonucleic acid (RNA) to be accurately duplicated. It also can perform reverse transcription and scrutinize itself while copying genetic information, which will enable both researchers and clinical laboratories to improve the accuracy of gene sequencing where RNA is involved.

The team published their findings in Science, the academic journal of The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and filed for a provisional patent for the new sequence of the discovered enzyme. (more…)

Strata Oncology, in Tandem with Thermo Fisher, Offers 100,000 Free Genetic Cancer Tests to Patients as Part of New Clinical Laboratory Business Model

Startup medical company proposes to offer free genetic testing to 100,000 advanced cancer patients to increase their chances for optimum therapeutic results

Strata Oncology (Strata), a precision medicine company based in Ann Arbor, Mich., plans to provide free genetic testing to advanced cancer patients beginning in 2017. The company raised $12-million dollars and teamed up with Thermo Fisher Scientific to complete the large-scale tumor sequencing project.

Using tumor tissue, Strata’s gene test sequences DNA and RNA to identify patients with certain gene mutations. This information is used to determine which cancer medications would be best for each patient. Patients are then referred to the appropriate pharmaceutical company for drug therapy and, potentially, for customized clinical trials.

Strata states on their website that their goal is to “dramatically expand late-stage cancer patients’ access to tumor sequencing and precision medicine trials, and to accelerate the approval and availability of breakthrough cancer medicines.” (more…)

New York Genome Center Opens New Gene Sequencing and Bioinformatics Facility in Downtown Manhattan

The Center brings together scientists from around the city to translate promising research into medical innovations to treat, prevent and manage disease

Gene sequencing is going big time in the Big Apple. Last month the New York Genome Center (NYGC) moved into a state-of-the-art, 170,000-square-foot genome sequencing and biometrics research building. New York City is putting down its marker to claim a leading role in advancing genetic knowledge.

What makes this development notable for the clinical laboratory industry and the anatomic pathology profession is the fact that cities across the nation are investing substantial amounts of capital to create their own genetic and biotech research and development hubs. Their common objective is to bring together all the expertise, financial support, and business acumen needed to create a job-creating critical mass in the fields of biotech and genetic medicine. (more…)

;