Fast, low-cost device uses the cloud to speed up diagnostic testing for HIV and more
Columbia Engineering |
Samuel K. Sia, associate professor of biomedical engineering at
Columbia Engineering, has taken his innovative lab-on-a-chip and developed a
way to not only check a patient's HIV status anywhere in the world with just a
finger prick, but also synchronize the results automatically and
instantaneously with central health-care records -- 10 times faster, the
researchers say, than the benchtop ELISA, a broadly used diagnostic technique.
The device was field-tested in Rwanda by a collaborative team from the Sia lab
and ICAP at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health. In the study published
online January 18, 2013, inClinical
Chemistry, and in the print April 2013 issue, Sia describes a major
advance towards providing people in remote areas of the world with
laboratory-quality diagnostic services traditionally available only in
centralized health care settings.
"We've
built a handheld mobile device that can perform laboratory-quality HIV testing,
and do it in just 15 minutes and on finger-pricked whole blood," Sia says.
"And, unlike current HIV rapid tests, our device can pick up positive
samples normally missed by lateral flow tests, and automatically synchronize the
test results with patient health records across the globe using both the cell
phone and satellite networks."
Sia
collaborated with Claros Diagnostics (a company he co-founded, now called OPKO
Diagnostics) to develop a pioneering strategy for an integrated microfluidic-based
diagnostic device -- the mChip -- that can perform complex laboratory assays,
and do so with such simplicity that these tests can easily be carried out
anywhere, including in resource-limited settings, at a very low cost. This new
study builds upon his earlier scientific concepts and incorporates a number of
new engineering elements that make the test automated to run with data
communication over both cell phone and satellite networks.
"There
are a set of core functions that such a mobile device has to deliver," he
says. "These include fluid pumping, optical detection, and real-time
synchronization of diagnostic results with patient records in the cloud. We've
been able to engineer all these functions on a handheld mobile device and all
powered by a battery."
This
new technology, which combines cell phone and satellite communication
technologies with fluid miniaturization techniques for performing all essential
ELISA functions, could lead to diagnosis and treatment for HIV-infected people
who, because they cannot get to centralized health care centers, do not get
tested or treated.
"This
is an important step forward for us towards making a real impact on
patients," says Jessica Justman, MD, senior technical director at ICAP and
associate clinical professor of medicine in epidemiology at the Mailman School
of Public Health. "And with the real-time data upload, policymakers and
epidemiologists can also monitor disease prevalence across geographical regions
more quickly and effectively."
Working
with ICAP, OPKO, the Rwandan Ministry of Health, and Rwandan collaborators at
Muhima Hospital and two health clinics -- Projet San Francisco and Projet
Ubuzima, Sia and his team assessed the device's ability to perform HIV testing
and then synchronized results in real time with the patients' electronic health
records. They successfully tested over 200 serum, plasma, and whole blood
samples, all collected in Rwanda.
The
mobile device also successfully transmitted all whole-blood test results from a
Rwandan clinic to a medical records database stored on the cloud. The device
produced results in agreement with a leading ELISA test, including detection of
weakly positive samples that were missed by existing rapid tests. The device
operated autonomously with minimal user input, produced each result in 15
minutes (compared to 3 hours with the benchtop ELISA), and consumed as little
power as a mobile phone.
This
latest study builds on previous work from the Sia Lab on building a
lab-on-a-chip for personal health diagnosis. For this earlier device, Columbia
University was named a Medical Devices runner-up in The Wall Street Journal's
prestigious Technology Innovation Awards in 2011.
This
research has been funded by a $2-million Saving Lives at Birth transition grant
(United States Agency for International Development, the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, Government of Norway, Grand Challenges Canada, and the World
Bank).
Sia's
next step will be to implement an antenatal care panel for diagnosing HIV and
sexually transmitted diseases for pregnant women in Rwanda. He is also
exploring the use of this technology for improving personal health for
consumers in the United States.
"The
ability to perform state-of-the-art diagnostics on mobile devices has the
potential to revolutionize how patients manage their health," Sia says.
"I'm pleased with the progress we have made so far, and we are working
hard with our collaborators to bring this technology to clinicians, patients,
and consumers."
Source: Columbia University
b�te@�Z�_sults with patient health records across the globe using both the cell
phone and satellite networks."
Sia
collaborated with Claros Diagnostics (a company he co-founded, now called OPKO
Diagnostics) to develop a pioneering strategy for an integrated microfluidic-based
diagnostic device -- the mChip -- that can perform complex laboratory assays,
and do so with such simplicity that these tests can easily be carried out
anywhere, including in resource-limited settings, at a very low cost. This new
study builds upon his earlier scientific concepts and incorporates a number of
new engineering elements that make the test automated to run with data
communication over both cell phone and satellite networks.
"There
are a set of core functions that such a mobile device has to deliver," he
says. "These include fluid pumping, optical detection, and real-time
synchronization of diagnostic results with patient records in the cloud. We've
been able to engineer all these functions on a handheld mobile device and all
powered by a battery."
This
new technology, which combines cell phone and satellite communication
technologies with fluid miniaturization techniques for performing all essential
ELISA functions, could lead to diagnosis and treatment for HIV-infected people
who, because they cannot get to centralized health care centers, do not get
tested or treated.
"This
is an important step forward for us towards making a real impact on
patients," says Jessica Justman, MD, senior technical director at ICAP and
associate clinical professor of medicine in epidemiology at the Mailman School
of Public Health. "And with the real-time data upload, policymakers and
epidemiologists can also monitor disease prevalence across geographical regions
more quickly and effectively."
Working
with ICAP, OPKO, the Rwandan Ministry of Health, and Rwandan collaborators at
Muhima Hospital and two health clinics -- Projet San Francisco and Projet
Ubuzima, Sia and his team assessed the device's ability to perform HIV testing
and then synchronized results in real time with the patients' electronic health
records. They successfully tested over 200 serum, plasma, and whole blood
samples, all collected in Rwanda.
The
mobile device also successfully transmitted all whole-blood test results from a
Rwandan clinic to a medical records database stored on the cloud. The device
produced results in agreement with a leading ELISA test, including detection of
weakly positive samples that were missed by existing rapid tests. The device
operated autonomously with minimal user input, produced each result in 15
minutes (compared to 3 hours with the benchtop ELISA), and consumed as little
power as a mobile phone.
This
latest study builds on previous work from the Sia Lab on building a
lab-on-a-chip for personal health diagnosis. For this earlier device, Columbia
University was named a Medical Devices runner-up in The Wall Street Journal's
prestigious Technology Innovation Awards in 2011.
This
research has been funded by a $2-million Saving Lives at Birth transition grant
(United States Agency for International Development, the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, Government of Norway, Grand Challenges Canada, and the World
Bank).
Sia's
next step will be to implement an antenatal care panel for diagnosing HIV and
sexually transmitted diseases for pregnant women in Rwanda. He is also
exploring the use of this technology for improving personal health for
consumers in the United States.
"The
ability to perform state-of-the-art diagnostics on mobile devices has the
potential to revolutionize how patients manage their health," Sia says.
"I'm pleased with the progress we have made so far, and we are working
hard with our collaborators to bring this technology to clinicians, patients,
and consumers."
Source: Columbia University
anV�tl@�Z�_orks."
Sia
collaborated with Claros Diagnostics (a company he co-founded, now called OPKO
Diagnostics) to develop a pioneering strategy for an integrated microfluidic-based
diagnostic device -- the mChip -- that can perform complex laboratory assays,
and do so with such simplicity that these tests can easily be carried out
anywhere, including in resource-limited settings, at a very low cost. This new
study builds upon his earlier scientific concepts and incorporates a number of
new engineering elements that make the test automated to run with data
communication over both cell phone and satellite networks.
"There
are a set of core functions that such a mobile device has to deliver," he
says. "These include fluid pumping, optical detection, and real-time
synchronization of diagnostic results with patient records in the cloud. We've
been able to engineer all these functions on a handheld mobile device and all
powered by a battery."
This
new technology, which combines cell phone and satellite communication
technologies with fluid miniaturization techniques for performing all essential
ELISA functions, could lead to diagnosis and treatment for HIV-infected people
who, because they cannot get to centralized health care centers, do not get
tested or treated.
"This
is an important step forward for us towards making a real impact on
patients," says Jessica Justman, MD, senior technical director at ICAP and
associate clinical professor of medicine in epidemiology at the Mailman School
of Public Health. "And with the real-time data upload, policymakers and
epidemiologists can also monitor disease prevalence across geographical regions
more quickly and effectively."
Working
with ICAP, OPKO, the Rwandan Ministry of Health, and Rwandan collaborators at
Muhima Hospital and two health clinics -- Projet San Francisco and Projet
Ubuzima, Sia and his team assessed the device's ability to perform HIV testing
and then synchronized results in real time with the patients' electronic health
records. They successfully tested over 200 serum, plasma, and whole blood
samples, all collected in Rwanda.
The
mobile device also successfully transmitted all whole-blood test results from a
Rwandan clinic to a medical records database stored on the cloud. The device
produced results in agreement with a leading ELISA test, including detection of
weakly positive samples that were missed by existing rapid tests. The device
operated autonomously with minimal user input, produced each result in 15
minutes (compared to 3 hours with the benchtop ELISA), and consumed as little
power as a mobile phone.
This
latest study builds on previous work from the Sia Lab on building a
lab-on-a-chip for personal health diagnosis. For this earlier device, Columbia
University was named a Medical Devices runner-up in The Wall Street Journal's
prestigious Technology Innovation Awards in 2011.
This
research has been funded by a $2-million Saving Lives at Birth transition grant
(United States Agency for International Development, the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, Government of Norway, Grand Challenges Canada, and the World
Bank).
Sia's
next step will be to implement an antenatal care panel for diagnosing HIV and
sexually transmitted diseases for pregnant women in Rwanda. He is also
exploring the use of this technology for improving personal health for
consumers in the United States.
"The
ability to perform state-of-the-art diagnostics on mobile devices has the
potential to revolutionize how patients manage their health," Sia says.
"I'm pleased with the progress we have made so far, and we are working
hard with our collaborators to bring this technology to clinicians, patients,
and consumers."
Source: Columbia University
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