| Literature DB >> 30501052 |
Daniel Migliozzi1, Thomas Guibentif2.
Abstract
Infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance are major burdens in developing countries, where very specific conditions impede the deployment of established medical infrastructures. Since biosensing devices are nowadays very common in developed countries, particularly in the field of diagnostics, they are at a stage of maturity at which other potential outcomes can be explored, especially on their possibilities for multiplexing and automation to reduce the time-to-results. However, the translation is far from being trivial. In order to understand the factors and barriers that can facilitate or hinder the application of biosensors in resource-limited settings, we analyze the context from several angles. First, the technology of the devices themselves has to be rethought to take into account the specific needs and the available means of these countries. For this, we describe the partition of a biosensor into its functional shells, which define the information flow from the analyte to the end-user, and by following this partition we assess the strengths and weaknesses of biosensing devices in view of their specific technological development and challenging deployment in low-resource environments. Then, we discuss the problem of cost reduction by pointing out transversal factors, such as throughput and cost of mistreatment, that need to be re-considered when analyzing the cost-effectiveness of biosensing devices. Beyond the technical landscape, the compliance with regulations is also a major aspect that is described with its link to the validation of the devices and to the acceptance from the local medical personnel. Finally, to learn from a successful case, we analyze a breakthrough inexpensive biosensor that is showing high potential with respect to many of the described aspects. We conclude by mentioning both some transversal benefits of deploying biosensors in developing countries, and the key factors that can drive such applications.Entities:
Keywords: cost-effectiveness; low-resource settings; medical biosensors; patterned-paper technology; point-of-care diagnostics; technological breakthrough
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30501052 PMCID: PMC6316672 DOI: 10.3390/bios8040119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Functional partitioning of a biosensor. Schematic view of the parts that compose a biosensor, conceptually and physically, along the information flow from the analyte to the user. Each functional partition is indicated with a specific color. For each partition, we indicate qualities that are crucial for implementation in low-resource settings, and a list of components/properties specific to that partition. Elements marked with * are the ones illustrated in the picture on the right, which compose an example of a portable biosensor described in [19].
Figure 2Patterned Paper Technology. Schematic of the technology described in Part IV to sense alanine transaminase in blood.
List of the main strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats for the patterned paper technology described in Part IV related to its deployment in developing countries.
|
Ultra-low-cost (less than 1$) Power-supply-free Safe disposable Portable No need of specialized operator Equipment-free Multiplexing capability |
Not quantitative Fragile Single-use Very basic sample processing only |
|
Many addressable needs (e.g., infectious diseases diagnostics, vaccination optimization, nutritional monitoring). Reimbursement from the state may motivate hospitals/patients to make use of them. |
Regulatory agencies may delay/oppose clinical validation Much fewer investments than in drug discovery and vaccine development Slow adoption by physicians and mistrust of results Low demand because of low revenue of the patients |