| Literature DB >> 26630284 |
Stephen Lee1, A J Aranyosi2, Michelle D Wong3, Ji Hyung Hong3, Jared Lowe3, Carol Chan3, David Garlock2, Scott Shaw2, Patrick D Beattie3, Zachary Kratochvil2, Nick Kubasti2, Kirsten Seagers2, Roozbeh Ghaffari4, Christina D Swanson5.
Abstract
In developing countries, the deployment of medical diagnostic technologies remains a challenge because of infrastructural limitations (e.g. refrigeration, electricity), and paucity of health professionals, distribution centers and transportation systems. Here we demonstrate the technical development and clinical testing of a novel electronics enabled microfluidic paper-based analytical device (EE-μPAD) for quantitative measurement of micronutrient concentrations in decentralized, resource-limited settings. The system performs immune-detection using paper-based microfluidics, instrumented with flexible electronics and optoelectronic sensors in a mechanically robust, ultrathin format comparable in size to a credit card. Autonomous self-calibration, plasma separation, flow monitoring, timing and data storage enable multiple devices to be run simultaneously. Measurements are wirelessly transferred to a mobile phone application that geo-tags the data and transmits it to a remote server for real time tracking of micronutrient deficiencies. Clinical tests of micronutrient levels from whole blood samples (n=95) show comparable sensitivity and specificity to ELISA-based tests. These results demonstrate instantaneous acquisition and global aggregation of diagnostics data using a fully integrated point of care system that will enable rapid and distributed surveillance of disease prevalence and geographical progression.Keywords: Diagnostic; Flexible microelectronics; Micronutrients; Near field communication; Paper microfluidic assay; Point-of-care
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26630284 DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2015.11.060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosens Bioelectron ISSN: 0956-5663 Impact factor: 10.618