Patents by Inventor Leon Terstappen

Leon Terstappen has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20070154960
    Abstract: Elevated number of Circulating Endothelial Cells (CEC) have been implicated in disease conditions associated with the formation or destruction of blood vessels such as acute coronary syndrome, thrombocytopenic purpura, sickle cell disease, sepsis, lupus, nephrotic syndromes, rejection of organ transplants, surgical trauma and cancer. This invention provides a method for assessing the levels of CEC which vary between different studies using a sensitive enrichment, imaging, and enumberation analysis. CD146 is one of the most specific endothelium-associated cell-surface antigens which can be used in image cytometry. CEC analysis provides an essential tool in prognostic/diagnostic evaluation in the clinic.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 2, 2007
    Publication date: July 5, 2007
    Inventors: Mark Connelly, Gerald Doyle, Galla Rao, Leon Terstappen
  • Publication number: 20070117158
    Abstract: The enumeration of cells in fluids by flow cytometry is widely used across many disciplines such as assessment of leukocyte subsets in different bodily fluids or of bacterial contamination in environmental samples, food products and bodily fluids. For many applications the cost, size and complexity of the instruments prevents wider use, for example, CD4 analysis in HIV monitoring in resource-poor countries. The novel device, methods and algorithms disclosed herein largely overcome these limitations. Briefly, all cells in a biological sample are fluorescently labeled, but only the target cells are also magnetically labeled. In addition, non-magnetically labeled cells are imaged for viability in a modified slide configuration. The labeled sample, in a chamber or cuvet, is placed between two wedge-shaped magnets to selectively move the magnetically labeled cells to the observation surface of the cuvet.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 12, 2006
    Publication date: May 24, 2007
    Inventors: Frank Coumans, Jan Greve, Frank Modica, Leon Terstappen, Arian Tibbe, John Verrant
  • Publication number: 20070037173
    Abstract: A cancer test having prognostic utility in predicting time to disease progression, overall survival, and response to therapy in patients with MBC based upon the presence and number of CTC's. The Cell SpotterĀ® System is used to enumerate CTC's in blood. The system immunomagnetically concentrates epithelial cells, fluorescently labels the cells and identifies and quantifies CTC's. The absolute number of CTC's detected in the peripheral blood tumor load is, in part, a factor in prediction of survival, time to progression, and response to therapy. The mean time to survival of patients depended upon a threshold number of 5 CTC's per 7.5 ml of blood. Detection of CTC's in metastatic cancer represents a novel prognostic factor in patients with metastatic cancers, suggests a biological role for the presence of tumor cells in the blood, and indicates that the detection of CTC's could be considered an appropriate surrogate marker for prospective therapeutic clinical trials.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 12, 2005
    Publication date: February 15, 2007
    Inventors: Jeffrey Allard, Massimo Cristofanilli, Leon Terstappen
  • Publication number: 20060257847
    Abstract: Apparatuses and methods for separating, immobilizing, and quantifying biological substances from within a fluid medium. Biological substances are observed by employing a vessel (6) having a chamber therein, the vessel comprising a transparent collection wall (5). A high internal gradient magnetic capture structure may be on the transparent collection wall (5), magnets (3) create an externally-applied force for transporting magnetically responsive material toward the transparent collection wall (5). V-shaped grooves on the inner surface of the viewing face of the chamber provide uniform. The invention is also useful in conducting quantitative analysis and sample preparation in conjunction with automated cell enumeration techniques.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 6, 2006
    Publication date: November 16, 2006
    Inventors: Tycho Scholtens, Leon Terstappen, Arjan Tibbe
  • Publication number: 20060194192
    Abstract: Compositions and methods for stabilizing rare cells in blood specimens, preserving the quality of blood specimens, and also serving as cell fixatives are disclosed which minimize losses of target cells (for example, circulating tumor cells) and formation of debris and aggregates from target cells, non-target cells and plasma components, thereby allowing more accurate analysis and classification of circulating tumor cells (CTC) and, ultimately, of tumor burdens in cancer patients. Stabilization of specimens is particularly desirable in protocols requiring rare cell enrichment from blood specimens drawn from cancer patients. Exposure of such specimens to potentially stressful conditions encountered, for example, in normal processing, mixing, shaking, delays due to transporting the blood, has been observed to not only diminish the number of CTC but also to generate debris and aggregates in the blood specimens that were found to interfere with accurate enumeration of target cells, if present.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 28, 2006
    Publication date: August 31, 2006
    Inventors: Galla Rao, Melissa Herman, Herman Rutner, Leon Terstappen
  • Publication number: 20060147901
    Abstract: Devices and methods for automated collection and image analysis are disclosed that enable identification or classification of microscopic objects aligned or deposited on surfaces. Such objects, e.g. detectably labeled rare target cells, are magnetically or non-magnetically immobilized and subjected to Time Delay Integration imaging (TDI). Incorporation of TDI technology into image cytometry analysis, like CellTracksĀ®, makes it possible to image moving objects with very high sensitivity and signal-to-noise ratios. Implementation of TDI camera technology with dual excitation and multispectral imaging of enriched rare cells provides a rapid system for detection, enumeration, differentiation and characterization of imaged rare cells on the basis of size, morphology and immunophenotype.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 1, 2006
    Publication date: July 6, 2006
    Inventors: Greve Jan, Federik Schreuder, Leon Terstappen, Arjan Tibbe
  • Publication number: 20060024756
    Abstract: The enumeration of cells in fluids by flow cytometry is widely used across many disciplines such as assessment of leukocyte subsets in different bodily fluids or of bacterial contamination in environmental samples, food products and bodily fluids. For many applications the cost, size and complexity of the instruments prevents wider use, for example, CD4 analysis in HIV monitoring in resource-poor countries. The novel device, methods and algorithms disclosed herein largely overcome these limitations. Briefly, all cells in a biological sample are fluorescently labeled, but only the target cells are also magnetically labeled. The labeled sample, in a chamber or cuvet, is placed between two wedge-shaped magnets to selectively move the magnetically labeled cells to the observation surface of the cuvet. An LED illuminates the cells and a CCD camera captures the images of the fluorescent light emitted by the target cells.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 30, 2004
    Publication date: February 2, 2006
    Inventors: Arjan Tibbe, Jan Greve, Dhanesh Gohel, Erik Droog, Leon Terstappen
  • Publication number: 20050181353
    Abstract: Compositions and methods for stabilizing rare cells in blood specimens, preserving the quality of blood specimens, and also serving as cell fixatives are disclosed which minimize losses of target cells (for example, circulating tumor cells) and formation of debris and aggregates from target cells, non-target cells and plasma components, thereby allowing more accurate analysis and classification of circulating tumor cells (CTC) and, ultimately, of tumor burdens in cancer patients. Stabilization of specimens is particularly desirable in protocols requiring rare cell enrichment from blood specimens drawn from cancer patients. Exposure of such specimens to potentially stressful conditions encountered, for example, in normal processing, mixing, shaking, delays due to transporting the blood, has been observed to not only diminish the number of CTC but also to generate debris and aggregates in the blood specimens that were found to interfere with accurate enumeration of target cells, if present.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 17, 2004
    Publication date: August 18, 2005
    Inventors: Galla Rao, Melissa Herman, Herman Rutner, Leon Terstappen
  • Publication number: 20050181463
    Abstract: The methods and reagents described in this invention are used to analyze circulating tumor cells, clusters, fragments, and debris. Analysis is performed with a number of platforms, including flow cytometry and the CellSpotterĀ® fluorescent microscopy imaging system. Analyzing damaged cells has shown to be important. However, there are two sources of damage: in vivo and in vitro. Damage in vivo occurs by apoptosis, necrosis, or immune response. Damage in vitro occurs during sample acquisition, handling, transport, processing, or analysis. It is therefore desirable to confine, reduce, eliminate, or at least qualify in vitro damage to prevent it from interfering in analysis. Described herein are methods to diagnose, monitor, and screen disease based on circulating rare cells, including malignancy as determined by CTC, clusters, fragments, and debris. Also provided are kits for assaying biological specimens using these methods.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 17, 2004
    Publication date: August 18, 2005
    Inventors: Galla Rao, Christopher Larson, Madeline Repollet, Herman Rutner, Leon Terstappen, Shawn O'Hara, Steven Gross
  • Publication number: 20050043521
    Abstract: Peripheral blood leucocytes incubated with a semi-synthetic phage antibody library and fluorochrome-labeled CD3 and CD20 antibodies were used to isolate human single chain Fv antibodies specific for subsets of blood leucocytes by flow cytometry. Isolated phage antibodies showed exclusive binding to the subpopulation used for selection or displayed additional binding to a restricted population of other cells in the mixture. At least two phage antibodies appeared to display hithereto unknown staining patterns of B lineage cells. This approach provides a subtractive procedure to rapidly obtain human antibodies against known and novel surface antigens in their native configuration, expressed on phenotypically defined subpopulations of cells. Importantly, this approach does not depend on immunization procedures or the necessity to repeatedly construct phage antibody libraries.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 3, 2004
    Publication date: February 24, 2005
    Inventors: Leon Terstappen, Ton Logtenberg
  • Publication number: 20050003464
    Abstract: Devices and methods for automated collection and image analysis are disclosed that enable identification or classification of microscopic objects aligned or deposited on surfaces. Such objects, e.g. detectably labeled rare target cells, are magnetically or non-magnetically immobilized and subjected to automated laser scanning to generate sequential digitized x-y sub-images or partial images of target and non-target objects that are combined to form reconstructed full images, thereby allowing detection, enumeration, differentiation and characterization of imaged objects on the basis of size, morphology and immunophenotype.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 2, 2003
    Publication date: January 6, 2005
    Inventors: Arjan Tibbe, Jan Greve, Leon Terstappen, Bart De Grooth
  • Patent number: 6551843
    Abstract: Disclosed is a method that improves the efficiency of reactions between specific binding pairs. By translating one member of the pair through a suspension of the second member, or across a surface to which the second member is immobilized, collision and binding frequencies are greatly increased. The resulting increased binding frequency allows for reduced incubation times and lower incubation temperatures. The enhanced collisions are advantageous for both molecular reactions, in which mixing is not always effective, and cellular reactions, in which the cells may be damaged by mixing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 29, 1999
    Date of Patent: April 22, 2003
    Assignee: Immunivest Corporation
    Inventors: Galla Chandra Rao, Leon Terstappen, Paul Liberti