Home testing for cancer and heart disease soon?In the era of home pregnancy tests, the obvious question is why easy-to-use self-tests have not yet been developed for life-threatening diseases.
We all grew up
with the idea that if a woman suspects she is pregnant she can simply pop into
a pharmacy and buy a pregnancy test to use at home.
Huge
impact
Conversely, if
someone suspects they are suffering from cancer, heart
disease, or an infection their first instinct is to contact a GP or call an
ambulance. So the obvious question is why easy-to-use self-tests have not yet
been developed for life-threatening diseases.
The answer is
straightforward for a scientist: it has to do with the level of the biomarker –
in this case, the proteins produced by the cells in the body that are specific
to the particular condition – that must be measured. Not only that but one has
to measure the complexity of the biological sample – the blood or serum in the case
of biomarkers. The impact of those two aspects is huge, as revealed by the very
limited technological alternatives to "dipstick"
tests currently available to the global healthcare market.
The “pregnancy
test” is actually a great example of a dipstick test capable of detecting the
presence of a pregnancy hormone called human chronic
gonadotrophin (hCG) in urine, which is produced by the body after
conceiving. The test uses similar chemistry to the one involved in measuring
many other protein biomarkers from blood – but the measurement of protein
biomarkers remains limited to bulky clinical pathology labs and companies are
still struggling to miniaturise this sophisticated lab equipment.
Clinical
diagnostics influences about 70% of healthcare
decisions, which means they are the foundation of a cost-effective
healthcare system. Life expectancy has increased
massively in recent years due to remarkable developments in clinical diagnostics,
these have been extensively reported in scientific literature.
Diagnostic tests provide critical physiological or biochemical information that
physicians or patients need for the best healthcare decisions.
So, in an era when
most humans struggle to live without portable computers, tablets, smartphones
and the rest – why has a “personal lab” not yet been invented? Mobile computers
only became possible because of major breakthroughs in battery life,
transistors, integrated circuits and software development, which allowed
incredible levels of miniaturisation. Clinical lab equipment needs to undergo a
similar revolution to the one that led to the development of modern computers.
Effective
miniaturisation
Decentralised
diagnostics is fundamental to modern sustainable healthcare systems – but
miniaturising clinical tests is often regarded as an extremely challenging
task.
Several health
conditions – including cancer, cardiac problems and infectious diseases – rely
on extremely sensitive quantitation, the ability to actually measure the
quantity of a biomarker rather than just providing a yes or no answer to its
presence in blood. Diagnosis through measuring these protein biomarkers
requires incredible sensitivity – that is not presently available with existing
point-of-care diagnostic tests.
Effective testing
at the point of care requires miniaturised technologies capable of translating
complex laboratory techniques into simple and rapid tests. A number of
point-of-care tests have effectively made a difference in improving the health
systems. This includes the glucose test for diabetes monitoring as well as
pregnancy and HIV tests. But point-of-care tests for chronic diseases such as
cardiovascular diseases and cancer – which according to the World Health
Organisation (WHO) were responsible for 68% of
deaths in 2012 worldwide – are generally not available, despite being of key
importance to early treatment and survival of patients with these health
conditions
Currently,
diagnostic tests require blood samples taken from patients at medical centres
or hospitals and sent to laboratories with sophisticated equipment and professional
operators. The process is expensive and can take up to three weeks.
Small is
beautiful
But our research
group has recently demonstrated a miniaturised
concept for rapid and accurate diagnosis of certain health conditions, such
as myocardial infarction, sepsis and different types of cancer. This uses a
low-cost plastic test strip called a microcapillary
film and a smartphone
or flatbed scanner.
The unique optical
transparency of this micro-engineered material allows us to overcome the
traditional barriers to signal interception – one of the most difficult
components to miniaturise in a clinical pathology system – by using
off-the-shelf parts. Due to the simplicity of the technology, the tests can be
performed in local medical centres – or even in patients' houses – improving
health treatments and reducing patient anxiety.
The MCF is an
ultra low-cost flat transparent film with a number of embedded
microcapillaries. Each capillary works as a miniature reaction chamber where
the blood sample is inserted and tested. After a certain reaction time, which
can be 15 minutes for prostate cancer or slightly longer for myocardial
infarction and sepsis, the capillaries exhibit a signal that can be detected by
a smartphone or a simple flatbed scanner.
This signal can be
related to certain amounts of a protein biomarker that is directly correlated
with a certain health condition allowing its early detection and treatment. MCF
technology provides low-cost, rapid and accurate measurement of protein
biomarkers for point-of-care diagnostics, improving the speed and quality of
health care decisions and patient treatments.
So let’s get our
scientific and engineering minds together and revolutionise clinical
diagnostics with personal labs accessible to all.
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