| Literature DB >> 33441866 |
Anastasiia Kozlova1, Daniil Bratashov2, Oleg Grishin2, Arkadii Abdurashitov3, Ekaterina Prikhozhdenko2, Roman Verkhovskii2, Natalia Shushunova2, Evgeny Shashkov4, Vladimir P Zharov5, Olga Inozemtseva2.
Abstract
In vivo liquid biopsy, especially using the photoacoustic (PA) method, demonstrated high clinical potential for early diagnosis of deadly diseases such as cancer, infections, and cardiovascular disorders through the detection of rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs), bacteria, and clots in the blood background. However, little progress has been made in terms of standardization of these techniques, which is crucial to validate their high sensitivity, accuracy, and reproducibility. In the present study, we addressed this important demand by introducing a dynamic blood vessel phantom with flowing mimic normal and abnormal cells. The light transparent silica microspheres were used as white blood cells and platelets phantoms, while hollow polymeric capsules, filled with hemoglobin and melanin, reproduced red blood cells and melanoma CTCs, respectively. These phantoms were successfully used for calibration of the PA flow cytometry platform with high-speed signal processing. The results suggest that these dynamic cell flow phantoms with appropriate biochemical, optical, thermal, and acoustic properties can be promising for the establishment of standardization tool for calibration of PA, fluorescent, Raman, and other detection methods of in vivo flow cytometry and liquid biopsy.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33441866 PMCID: PMC7806591 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-80487-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996