| Literature DB >> 31744130 |
Hussein Alawieh1,2, Trishia El Chemaly1, Samir Alam3, Massoud Khraiche1.
Abstract
Heart failure is a class of cardiovascular diseases that remains the number one cause of death worldwide with a substantial economic burden of around $18 billion incurred by the healthcare sector in 2017 due to heart failure hospitalization and disease management. Although several laboratory tests have been used for early detection of heart failure, these traditional diagnostic methods still fail to effectively guide clinical decisions, prognosis, and therapy in a timely and cost-effective manner. Recent advances in the design and development of biosensors coupled with the discovery of new clinically relevant cardiac biomarkers are paving the way for breakthroughs in heart failure management. Natriuretic neurohormone peptides, B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) and N-terminal prohormone of BNP (NT-proBNP), are among the most promising biomarkers for clinical use. Remarkably, they result in an increased diagnostic accuracy of around 80% owing to the strong correlation between their circulating concentrations and different heart failure events. The latter has encouraged research towards developing and optimizing BNP biosensors for rapid and highly sensitive detection in the scope of point-of-care testing. This review sheds light on the advances in BNP and NT-proBNP sensing technologies for point-of-care (POC) applications and highlights the challenges of potential integration of these technologies in the clinic. Optical and electrochemical immunosensors are currently used for BNP sensing. The performance metrics of these biosensors-expressed in terms of sensitivity, selectivity, reproducibility, and other criteria-are compared to those of traditional diagnostic techniques, and the clinical applicability of these biosensors is assessed for their potential integration in point-of-care diagnostic platforms.Entities:
Keywords: BNP; NT-proBNP; biomarkers; heart failure; nanobiosensors; point-of-care-testing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31744130 PMCID: PMC6891483 DOI: 10.3390/s19225003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Comparison of promising cardiac biomarkers.
| Cardiac Biomarker | Pathophysiological Model | Cut-off Value | Diagnosis | Prognosis | Therapy | Cardio-Specific |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BNP | Cardiac Myocyte Stress | 400 pg/mL | + | + | + | Yes |
| NT-proBNP | Cardiac Myocyte Stress | 0.25–2 ng/mL | + | + | + | Yes |
| MR-proANP | Cardiac Myocyte Stress | 120 pmol/L | + | + | ? | Yes |
| Troponins | Myocyte Injury and Necrosis | 0.01–0.1 ng/mL | + | + | ? | Yes |
| Copeptin | Neurohormonal Activation | - | - | + | - | No |
| Myeloperoxidase | Oxidative Stress | 350 ng/mL | - | + | ? | No |
| NGAL | Renal Dysfunction | - | - | + | - | No |
| C-Reactive Protein | Inflammatory | - | + | ? | No | |
| Tumor necrosis factor | Inflammatory | 0.0036 ng/mL | - | + | ? | No |
| sST2 | Adverse Cardiac Remodeling: cardiac stress, inflammation, and fibrosis | 35 ng/mL | - | + | ? | No |
Figure 1Schematic of a sandwich-type BNP immunoassay used with an ECL immunosensor [60]. Glassy carbon electrodes, modified with Au nanoflowers, are functionalized with primary antibodies. Secondary antibodies are conjugated to single wall carbon nanohorns linked to bimettalic nanocubes and loaded with a novel self-catalyzed luminescence emitter.
Review of optical and electrochemical biosensors for BNP detection.
| Ref | Technique | BNP Type | Stability | Reproducibility | Sensitivity | Selectivity | Sample Used | Incubation (min) | Response Time | Functionalization | Surface Characterization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Fluorescence-based | NT-pro BNP | - | <10% intra/inter assay variability | Linear Range: 200–26,000 pg/mL | - | Human serum, plasma, and whole blood | - | 10 min | Covalent bonding (EDC/ NHS) | - |
| [ | Optical-intensity based | BNP | - | - | Limit of Detection: 10 pg/mL | - | Whole blood | - | - | Biotinylated anti-BNP Anti-bodies binded to streptavidin-coated MMPs | UV-vis spectro-photometry |
| [ | Electrochemi-luminiscence-based | NT-pro BNP | ±1.9%/12 cycles | 3.48% intra-assay precision 2.73% inter-assay precision | Linear Range: 0.1 pg/mL–25 ng/mL | Higher response than that to AFP, Col IV, and PSA | Undiluted human serum | 45 | - | Sandwich immunoassay: glassy carbon electrodes with NT-pro BNP Ab1 & PTC-Lu/PdCu@SWCNHs with Ab2 | SEM, XPS, and CV |
| [ | SPR-based | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 5 pg/mL–100 ng/mL | - | Human serum | 30 | Real-time | BNP-modified Micro-channel by EDC/NHS covalent bonding | - |
| [ | SPR-based | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 1 aM–500 nM | Non-specific adsorption | Undiluted human serum | 60 | Real-time | Sandwich immunoassay: EDC/NHS functionalizaton of BNP aptamers and 50 nm nanocubes with secondary anti-BNP | UV-vis spectroscopy and TEM |
| [ | SPR-based | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 10–100 ng/mL | Non-specific adsorption in human plasma | BNP buffer solution + human plasma | - | Real-time | Sandwich immunoassay with EDC/NHS covalent bonding of primary anti-BNP | - |
| [ | SPR-based | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 1 aM–500 nM | CRP, Myo, and cTnI | Human serum | 10–15 | - | Sandwich immunoassay | TEM + UV/vis spectro-photometry |
| [ | Fluorescence-based | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 26–260 pg/mL | - | - | 5 | - | Sandwich immunoassay Functionalization of quartz fiber with anti-BNP (EDC/NHS) | - |
| [ | Fluorescence-based | NT-pro BNP | - | Less than 10% variation | Linear Range: 7–600 pg/mL | Low interference for hemoglobin, Bilirubin, intra-lipid, and biotin | Human plasma | 11 | - | Immobilized with oligonucleotides using 9G technology | - |
| [ | Potentiometric | BNP | - | for 20 devices | Linear Range: 50–200 pg/mL | ±5% for Myo, cTni, CK-MB | Serum | - | 1 min | Covalent bond (EDC/NHS) | SEM, AFM |
| [ | Potentiometric | BNP | Regenerated over one week and for 3 cycles | for 2 devices | Linear Range: 100 fM–1nM | <13% for BSA, D-Dimer, HAS | Whole Blood | 30 | 10 s | Covalent bond (EDC/NHS) | SEM, TEM, EDS, XPS |
| [ | Potentiometric | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 0–1000 pg/mL | Spiked BNP concentrations in whole blood | Purified BNP + spiked BNP in whole blood+ whole blood | 5 | - | - | - |
| [ | Amperometric | NT-pro BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 0.04–2.5 ng/mL | - | Human serum | 16 | - | Biotin-avidin interactions + ferrite permanent magnet for magnetic nanoparticle immobilization | - |
| [ | Amperometric | NT-pro BNP | ±2.3% /month | - | Linear Range: 0.005–1.67 ng/mL | <4.3% for BSA, healthy serum, dopamine, | Serum + Whole Blood | 18 | - | Sandwich immunoassay via biotin-avidin interactions + ferrite permanent magnet for magnetic nanoparticle immobilization | TEM, AFM, XPS |
| [ | Amperometric | BNP | Stable/25 days | 4.7%–6.4% for 5 devices | Linear Range: 0.014 and 15 ng/mL | No significant difference with CRP, cTnI, cTNT, L(a), TNF alpha, IL-8, NTproBNP, and AXL | Serum | 45 | - | Aryl diazonium salt chemistry using 4-amino-thiopheno | AFM, SEM, EDX |
| [ | Impedance-Based | BNP | - | for 3 devices | Linear Range: 1 ag/mL–10 ug/mL | No CRP cross-reactivity | Serum | 15 | Near real-time | Covalent bond between antibody-linkers and amine of thiol (DSP/DMSO) | Optical micrograph, SEM |
| [ | Conductometric | BNP | - | - | Linear Range: 50 fg/mL–3 ng/mL | High confidence for BSA + others | Serum | - | - | Covalent bond (EDC/NHS) | SEM, Raman spectroscopy |
Figure 2Electrochemical and optical nanobiosensing of BNP and Nt-proBNP.
Figure 3Schematic of the optimization of a LFIA for the point-of-care detection of BNP [66]. (A) a thin conjugate pad added to get a complete release of GNP-Ab; (B) LFIA principle; (C) adjustment of GNP diameter to increase the signal; (D) adjustment of the concentration of the test line to increase the signal.
Figure 4Schematic of a BNP immunoassay on a rGO FET decorated with PtNPsfor signal amplification. The biosensor employs a custom-made microfilter and polycarbonate membranes to allow measurement in whole blood by removing blood cells [79].
Figure 5Extended gate electric double layer (EDL) FET biosensor [80]. (a) schematic illustration of the biosensor; (b) real image of the hand-held measurement system integrating the sensor array chip.