DocumentCode :
2089895
Title :
Sample concentration and purification for point-of-care diagnostics
Author :
Ho, N.T. ; Fan, Angie ; Klapperich, C.M. ; Cabodi, M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Boston Univ., Boston, MA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
Aug. 28 2012-Sept. 1 2012
Firstpage :
2396
Lastpage :
2399
Abstract :
The ability to increase the concentration of target analytes in a fixed sample volume can potentially lower the limit of detection for many biosensing techniques, and thus is key in sample preparation for infectious disease diagnosis. Concentration by evaporation is an effective method to achieve target enrichment. However, concentrating human samples, including blood and plasma, by evaporation-based methods is made challenging by high concentrations of proteins and electrolytes. Dehydration of the proteins causes the sample to turn into a gel, hindering further analysis. At the same time, decreasing the volume increases the overall concentration of electrolytes, causing bacterial or viral particle lysis, and making them more difficult to detect in affinity-based biosensors. Thus, we fabricated a microfluidic chip that incorporates both dialysis and concentration in a single design. The chip dialyzes the proteins from the plasma, while maintaining an appropriate concentration of electrolytes and concentrating the sample targets. The process to concentrate plasma or serum samples by a factor of 10 takes less than 30 minutes. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrated the chip using a defective Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). To distinguish patients on antiretroviral therapy who are failing therapy from those who are not, a diagnostic must be able to detect HIV in plasma down to at least 1000 particles per milliliter. For a number of technical reasons, it is difficult to get on-chip PCR reactions to reach this level of sensitivity, so concentration of HIV from lower viral load samples has the potential to improve the sensitivity of many types of molecular point-of-care viral load tests.
Keywords :
bioMEMS; biochemistry; biological specimen preparation; electrolytes; microfluidics; microorganisms; patient diagnosis; proteins; antiretroviral therapy; biosensing techniques; blood; defective HIV; dialysis; electrolyte concentration; evaporation concentration; human immunodeficiency virus; infectious disease diagnosis; microfluidic chip; molecular point of care viral load tests; plasma proteins; plasma samples; point of care diagnostics; sample concentration; sample enrichment; sample preparation; sample purification; serum samples; target analyte concentration; Biomembranes; Biosensors; Human immunodeficiency virus; Humans; Microfluidics; Plasmas; Proteins; Blood Chemical Analysis; Blood Proteins; Blood Specimen Collection; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Flow Injection Analysis; Humans; Microfluidic Analytical Techniques; Point-of-Care Systems; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2012 Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
1557-170X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4119-8
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2012.6346446
Filename :
6346446
Link To Document :
بازگشت