| Literature DB >> 32685026 |
Chun Kwan Chen1, Junchen Liao1, Man Sze Li1, Bee Luan Khoo1.
Abstract
Since the discovery of circulating tumor cells in 1869, technological advances in the study of biomarkers from liquid biopsy have made it possible to diagnose disease in a less invasive way. Although blood-based liquid biopsy has been used extensively for the detection of solid tumors and immune diseases, the potential of urine-based liquid biopsy has not been fully explored. Advancements in technologies for the harvesting and analysis of biomarkers are providing new opportunities for the characterization of other disease types. Liquid biopsy markers such as exfoliated bladder cancer cells, cell-free DNA (cfDNA), and exosomes have the potential to change the nature of disease management and care, as they allow a cost-effective and convenient mode of patient monitoring throughout treatment. In this review, we addressed the advancement of research in the field of disease detection for the key liquid biopsy markers such as cancer cells, cfDNA, and exosomes, with an emphasis on urine-based liquid biopsy. First, we highlighted key technologies that were widely available and used extensively for clinical urine sample analysis. Next, we presented recent technological developments in cell and genetic research, with implications for the detection of other types of diseases, besides cancer. We then concluded with some discussions on these areas, emphasizing the role of microfluidics and artificial intelligence in advancing point-of-care applications. We believe that the benefits of urine biopsy provide diagnostic development potential, which will pave opportunities for new ways to guide treatment selections and facilitate precision disease therapies. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Liquid biopsy; cell-free DNA; disease monitoring; exfoliated bladder cancer cells; extracellular vesicles
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32685026 PMCID: PMC7359094 DOI: 10.7150/thno.44634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
List of common urinary biomarkers
| Type | Biomarker | Disease(s) | Advantages | Disadvantages | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cells | RBCs | Varied, e.g., Glomerular membrane damage | Defined morphology; Complements downstream analysis | High phenotypic heterogeneity; Low and varied abundance | |
| Neutrophils | Varied, e.g., Prostatitis, urethritis | ||||
| Other WBCs, e.g., monocytes, histiocytes | |||||
| Clue cells | Infection by the bacterium | ||||
| Transitional epithelial cells | Malignancy or viral infection | ||||
| Renal tubular epithelial cells | Necrosis of renal tubules | ||||
| cfDNA | Varied (e.g., EGFR, KRAS) | Varied | Ease of access; Complementary to molecular characterization | Short half-life; Low abundance; | |
| Exosome | NA | Varied, e.g., peripartum cardiomyopathy | Stability; Large range of biomarkers | No specific method of detection; | |
| Others, e.g., minerals | Urine crystals | Varied, e.g., Inherited cystinuria | Low cost and rapid | Sensitive to patient dietary habits | |
| Urine casts | Varied, e.g., Chronic renal disease |
Abbreviations: RBCs = Red blood cells; WBCs = White blood cells. NA = Not applicable; cfDNA = cell free DNA; EV = extracellular vesicles.
Current and upcoming technologies for the analysis of liquid biopsies
| Technology | Sensitivity | Specificity | Advantage | Disadvantage | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Filtration | EBCC: 87% | ND | Label-free, ease of operations | Low throughout, possible damage of cells | |
| Antigen-based cell capture | EBCC: 80-100% | EBCC: 70-99% | Targeted capture | High cost, loss of target cells with low antigen levels | |
| LFA | SP: 74%; | SP: 97.2%; NMP22: 87-89% | Rapid (< 15 min), ease of operations, POC | Require precise antibody preparation, sensitivity limited by sample volume | |
| FISH | 72-87% | 91.8% | Ease of operations, validated procedures | Operator-dependent | |
| PCR | FGFR: 11.6% | Economical, ease of operations, validated procedures | Limited dynamic range, | ||
| NGS | FGFR: 60%; | UroSEEK: 93-99.5%; CAPP-Seq: 96-100% | High throughput, | High cost, | |
| Dipstick Urinalysis | ND | ND | Low cost, rapid, ease of operations, POC | Confirmatory test required, potential false outcomes | |
| Cell-based | |||||
| Sandwich ELISA | LAM: 14-51% | LAM: 94-97% | Does not require purification of sample | Requires antibody optimization due to cross reaction | |
| Inertial focusing | 93.3 ± 4.8% | ND | Label-free, high throughput | Require sample concentration | |
| 3D traps | ND | ND | Low LOD: 10 exosomes per μl | Complicated fabrication of nanopatterns, time-consuming | |
| DLD | ND | ND | Low LOD: 10 exosomes per μl | Intricate fabrication patterns | |
| Integrated devices | BC: 81.3% | BC: 90% | POC | Cost, complex handling | |
| LPPs-based sensor | miRNA-21: > 97.33% | ND | High signal-to-noise ratio, low LOD | Challenge in selecting suitable aptamer sequence | |
| Catalytic gold nanocluster | ND | ND | POC, ease of operations, rapid | Not tested in humans | |
Abbreviations: 3D = Three dimensional; DLD = Deterministic lateral displacement; LPP = Long persistent phosphors; LOD = Limit of detection; POC = Point of care; SP = Streptococcus pneumoniae; LAM = Lipoarabinomannan; LFA = Lateral Flow Assays. PCR = Polymerase chain reaction; NGS = Next-generation sequencing; FISH = Fluorescence in-situ hybridization; BC = Bladder cancer; SP = Streptococcus pneumoniae; ND = not determined; EBCC = exfoliated bladder cancer cells.
List of Abbreviations
| EBCCs | Exfoliated bladder cancer cells |
|---|---|
| cfDNA | Cell-free DNA |
| EVs | Extracellular vesicles |
| WBC | White blood cells |
| RBC | Red blood cells |
| CC | Colorectal cancer |
| BC | Bladder cancer |
| PC | Prostate cancer |
| FISH | Fluorescence in-situ hybridization |
| ELISA | Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay |
| PCR | Polymerase chain reaction |
| qPCR | Real-time polymerase chain reaction |
| dPCR | Digital polymerase chain reaction |
| NGS | Next gene sequencing |
| FGFR3 | Fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 |
| NSCLC | Non-small cell lung cancer |
| EBV | Epstein-Barr virus |
| miRNA | MicroRNA |
| LFA | Lateral flow assays |
| SP | Streptococcus pneumonia |
| NMP22 | Nuclear matrix protein 22 |
| POC | Point-of-care |
| FDA | Food and Drug Administration |
| BTA | Bladder Tumor Antigen |
| BinaxNOW-SP | BinaxNOW urine-based test for S. pneumoniae |
| MPs | Magnetic particles |
| PCA3 | Prostate cancer antigen 3 |
| PSA | Prostate-specific antigen |
| TERT | Telomerase reverse transcriptase |
| cDNA | Complementary DNA |
| ddPCR | Droplet digital polymerase chain reaction |
| RNA-seq | RNA sequencing |
| TB | Tuberculosis |
| LAM | Lipoarabinomannan |
| HIV | Human immunodeficiency virus |
| CTCs | Circulating tumor cells |
| 3D | Three dimensional |
| DLD | Deterministic lateral displacement |
| LPPs | Long persistent phosphors |
| LPPNs | Long persistent phosphors' nanoparticles |
| cDNAs | Single-stranded DNAs |
| BHQ-DNAs | Back-hole-quencher-label DNAs |
| ASPNC | Afterglow semiconductor polymer nanocomposite |
| AuNCs | Gold nanoclusters |
| MMPs | Matrix metalloproteinases |
| LOD | Limit of detection |