| Literature DB >> 28520780 |
Meaghan Bond1, Brady Hunt1, Bailey Flynn1, Petri Huhtinen2, Russell Ware3, Rebecca Richards-Kortum1.
Abstract
A rapid test to identify patients with sickle cell disease could have important benefits in low-resource settings. Sickle cell anemia (SCA) affects about 300,000 newborns each year, the majority of whom are born in sub-Saharan Africa. Low-cost therapies are available to treat SCA, but most countries in sub-Saharan Africa lack robust neonatal screening programs needed to identify patients in need of treatment. To address this need, we developed and evaluated a competitive lateral flow assay that identifies patients with SCA (genotype HbSS) in 15 minutes using undiluted whole blood. A small volume of blood (0.5 μL- 3 μL) is mixed with antibody-coated blue latex beads in a tube and applied to the strip. Strips are then placed in a well of running buffer and allowed to run for 10 minutes. Laboratory evaluation with samples containing different proportions of hemoglobin A (HbA) and hemoglobin S (HbS) indicated that the test should enable identification of SCA patients but not persons with sickle cell trait (SCT). We evaluated the test using 41 samples from individuals with SCA, SCT, and normal blood. With visual inspection or quantitative analysis, we found a 98% accuracy when differentiating SCA from normal and SCT samples as a group (90% sensitivity and 100% specificity for identifying SCA). This work demonstrates important steps towards making a lateral flow test for hemoglobinopathies more appropriate for point-of-care use; further work is needed before the test is appropriate for clinical use.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28520780 PMCID: PMC5433739 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic and example images of lateral flow strips.
(a) Schematic of lateral flow test strip for three possible conditions: normal, sickle cell trait, and sickle cell disease blood. HbA, HbS, and an anti-mouse control antibody are dried on the strip at the capture and control lines. Two populations of latex beads (one conjugated to anti-HbA, the other to anti-HbS) and the blood sample are flowed up the strip. (b) Resulting visible readout on the strip for normal, sickle cell trait, and sickle cell disease blood. (c) Scanned images of example strips run with patient blood. Top image shows full-color scan; bottom image shows red channel of same image. Labels on the side are a guide to interpreting the competitive assay: a line present at the “A” line indicates normal, at the “S” line indicates SCA, and at neither indicates SCT. The positive control line must be present for the test to be valid.
Fig 2Determining the range of acceptable blood volume.
(a) Representative strips run with varying amounts of normal blood, including a negative control with no blood. Top image shows full-color scan; bottom image shows red channel of the same image. (b) Signal-to-background ratio of strips in part a (normal blood) and the A threshold set by previous experiment. Error bars represent ±1 SD of three strips. *10 μL represents the average of only 2 strips. (c) Representative strips run with varying amounts of SCA blood, including a negative control with no blood. (d) Signal-to-background ratio of strips in part c (SCA blood) and the S threshold set by previous experiment.
Fig 3Varying ratios of HbA: HbS.
(a) Representative strips run with varying ratios of HbA: HbS. Top image shows full-color scan; bottom image shows red channel of the same image. (b) Quantification of strips in part a. Dotted lines represent the thresholds. Error bars represent ±1 SD.
Confusion matrix comparing gold standard diagnosis (HPLC) to visual interpretation results from all 3 readers, differentiating SCA samples from SCT or normal samples.
The results of all three readers were concordant.
| Strip Test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal/SCT | SCA | |||
| HPLC | Normal/SCT | 31 | 0 | |
| SCA | 1 | 9 | ||
Confusion matrix comparing gold standard diagnosis (HPLC) to quantitative analysis for detection of SCA.
One strip was classified as having both A and S lines present, which does not correspond to a diagnosis, and it is not included in this table.
| Strip Test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal/SCT | SCA | |||
| HPLC | Normal/SCT | 31 | 0 | |
| SCA | 0 | 9 | ||
Comparison of sickle cell diagnostics indicating the capability of the test to distinguish among normal, SCT, and SCA blood.
| Sample Type: | Normal | SCT | SCA | Requires Dilution? | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SickleDex | Normal | SCT/SCA | Yes | ||
| Yang et al. | Normal | SCT | SCA | Yes | |
| SickleSCAN | Normal | SCT | SCA | Yes | |
| Competitive lateral flow | Normal/SCT | SCA | No | ||