본문으로 건너뛰기
← 뒤로

Rapid Microfluidic Drug Sensitivity Testing Within 5 Days Using Minimal Clinical Tumor Samples.

1/5 보강
Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) 2026 Vol.13(9) p. e11065
Retraction 확인
출처

Chen YX, Zhang Y, Yan YJ, Zhang MT, Chen JB, Jiang YR, Wu J, Wang HF, Pan JZ, Chen ZG, Huang J, Fang Q

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Rapid screening of personalized drugs based on patients' primary cell samples can provide precise and timely treatment guidance for clinical oncology patients.

이 논문을 인용하기

BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Chen YX, Zhang Y, et al. (2026). Rapid Microfluidic Drug Sensitivity Testing Within 5 Days Using Minimal Clinical Tumor Samples.. Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), 13(9), e11065. https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202511065
MLA Chen YX, et al.. "Rapid Microfluidic Drug Sensitivity Testing Within 5 Days Using Minimal Clinical Tumor Samples.." Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), vol. 13, no. 9, 2026, pp. e11065.
PMID 41355609

Abstract

Rapid screening of personalized drugs based on patients' primary cell samples can provide precise and timely treatment guidance for clinical oncology patients. However, this goal faces great challenges due to the scarce clinical samples and large sample consumption, and long experimental time required by current drug screening methods. Here, a rapid, high-throughput microfluidic drug sensitivity testing system capable of accomplishing single and combination drug screening of multiple antitumor drugs in 5 days is established with minimal amounts of clinical primary tumor samples, avoiding the need for cell pre-expansion and preserving the tumor heterogeneity. An airflow-impacting approach is developed to fabricate nanoliter-scale microcavity arrays with ultra-smooth microcavity surfaces, with which rapid formation and 3D culture of tumor cell spheroids from small numbers of cell samples, as well as the subsequent high-throughput drug sensitivity testing can be achieved within 5 days. This applies the system in rapid drug sensitivity testing on primary samples from 21 clinical breast cancer patients to quantify the responses of patient-derived cells to chemotherapy and endocrine drugs under both the mono-drug and combinational-drug treatment modes.

MeSH Terms

Humans; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Antineoplastic Agents; Breast Neoplasms; Female; Microfluidics; High-Throughput Screening Assays; Cell Line, Tumor; Spheroids, Cellular; Microfluidic Analytical Techniques

같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)