Deciphering the relative contribution of vascular inflammation and blood rheology in metastatic spreading
Hilaria Mollica, Alessandro Coclite, Marco E. Miali, Rui Pereira,, Laura Paleari, Chiara Manneschi, Andrea DeCensi, Paolo Decuzzi

TL;DR
This study uses microfluidic models to analyze how blood rheology and vascular inflammation influence circulating tumor cell adhesion, revealing that both factors similarly promote metastasis, with implications for understanding cancer spread.
Contribution
It provides the first combined analysis of blood rheology and inflammation effects on tumor cell adhesion using microfluidic and computational models.
Findings
Blood rheology enhances tumor cell deposition by 2-3 times.
Inflammation increases adhesion 2-4 times.
Blood rheology and inflammation contribute similarly to metastasis.
Abstract
Vascular adhesion of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) is a key step in cancer spreading. If inflammation is recognized to favor the formation of vascular metastatic niches, little is known about the contribution of blood rheology to CTC deposition. Herein, a microfluidic chip, covered by a confluent monolayer of endothelial cells, is used for analyzing the adhesion and rolling of colorectal (HCT 15) and breast (MDA MB 231) cancer cells under different biophysical conditions. These include the analysis of cell transport in a physiological solution and whole blood; over a healthy and a TNF alpha inflamed endothelium; with a flow rate of 50 and 100 nL/min. Upon stimulation of the endothelial monolayer with TNF alpha (25 ng/mL), CTC adhesion increases by 2 to 4 times whilst cell rolling velocity only slightly reduces. Notably, whole blood also enhances cancer cell deposition by 2 to 3 times,…
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