Developed New Method in Diagnosing Prostate Cancer

12 March 2020

GMP News

Sechenov researchers together with their colleagues from Australia used the microfluidics technology to develop a device able to isolate cancer cells from urine of patients with prostate cancer. The study showed high sensitivity and specificity of the new method in diagnosing prostate cancer. The results obtained were published in Cancers Journal.

Nowadays, two methods are usually used to prove the diagnosis: the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test and the tissue biopsy – taking the tissue samples for analysis. Both of these methods have significant drawbacks. Blood test is not specific enough and can produce false positive results since the PSA level rises not only in case of prostate cancer but also during other diseases of the prostate gland. Tissue biopsy is an invasive examination that can cause adverse side effects such as local bleeding and infections. Also, as previous studies have shown, the sensitivity of liquid blood biopsy (isolating cancer cells) is rather poor because of the low level of cells in blood. So, scientists suggest an alternative that is a liquid urine biopsy: the prostate gland is closely connected with the urethra and cancer cells are washed out during urination.

“As we have shown, while testing this technique we managed to collect 85 (±6) % of the total number of prostate cancer cells, as well as to isolate cells from the urine of 86% of patients with localised cancer in the early stage. Now we are trying to optimise the method to improve its efficacy, specificity and sensitivity while the technology itself is going through the patent process,” said Alexey Rzhevskiy, research associate in the Institute of Molecular Medicine, Sechenov University.

To isolate cells from the liquid, researchers developed a microfluidic chip – a device made from polymer with a thin spiral channel, forked on one end, and three holes: one for urine intake and two for cell separation. The chip is designed in a way that allows the cancer cells larger than others to shift to the inner wall of the channel and leave it through one of the holes while smaller and lighter cells gather along the outer wall and come out through the other hole. This effect is caused by the joint action of several centrifugal forces.

The authors tested the device using saline with the known number of cells (in pilot studies) and the samples of urine of healthy volunteers and patients with the prostate cancer. During the pilot experiments the chip isolated from 80 to 90% of cancer cells. Tests with the urine samples were rather successful too: they detected the disease in 12 out of 14 patients with cancer and confirmed the health of 11 out of 14 healthy volunteers.

Print

Our news

All news

Media Center

Read more