106 results on '"Richards-Kortum, Rebecca"'
Search Results
2. Drop-to-drop variation in the cellular components of fingerprick blood: implications for point-of-care diagnostic development.
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Bond, Meaghan M. and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
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CELL anatomy , *HEMATOLOGY , *POINT-of-care testing , *BLOOD collection , *GRANULOCYTES , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL databases , *BLOOD testing , *CLINICAL medicine , *FINGERS , *PILOT projects , *STANDARDS ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Objectives: Blood obtained via fingerprick is commonly used in point-of-care assays, but few studies have assessed variability in parameters obtained from successive drops of fingerprick blood, which may cause problems for clinical decision making and for assessing accuracy of point-of-care tests.Methods: We used a hematology analyzer to analyze the hemoglobin concentration, total WBC count, three-part WBC differential, and platelet count in six successive drops of blood collected from one fingerprick from each of 11 donors, and we used a hemoglobinometer to measure the hemoglobin concentration of 10 drops of fingerprick blood from each of 7 donors.Results: The average percent coefficient of variation (CV) for successive drops of fingerprick blood was higher by up to 3.4 times for hemoglobin, 5.7 times for WBC count, 3 times for lymphocyte count, 7.7 times for granulocyte count, and 4 times for platelets than in venous controls measured using a hematology analyzer. The average percent CV for fingerprick blood was up to 5 times higher for hemoglobin than venous blood measured using a point-of-care hemoglobinometer. Fluctuations in blood parameters with increasing volume of fingerprick blood are within instrument variability for volumes equal to or greater than 60 to 100 μL.Conclusions: These data suggest caution when using measurements from a single drop of fingerprick blood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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3. A paper and plastic device for the combined isothermal amplification and lateral flow detection of Plasmodium DNA.
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Cordray, Michael S. and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
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PLASMODIUM , *MALARIA diagnosis , *RECOMBINASES , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *GEL electrophoresis - Abstract
Background: Isothermal amplification techniques are emerging as a promising method for malaria diagnosis since they are capable of detecting extremely low concentrations of parasite target while mitigating the need for infrastructure and training required by other nucleic acid based tests. Recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) is promising for further development since it operates in a short time frame (<30 min) and produces a product that can be visually detected on a lateral flow dipstick. A self-sealing paper and plastic system that performs both the amplification and detection of a malaria DNA sequence is presented. Methods: Primers were designed using the NCBI nBLAST tools and screened using gel electrophoresis. Paper and plastic devices were prototyped using commercial design software and parts were cut using a laser cutter and assembled by hand. Synthetic copies of the Plasmodium 18S gene were spiked into solution and used as targets for the RPA reaction. To test the performance of the device the same samples spiked with synthetic target were run in parallel both in the paper and plastic devices and using conventional bench top methods. Results: Novel RPA primers were developed that bind to sequences present in the four species of Plasmodium which infect humans. The paper and plastic devices were found to be capable of detecting as few as 5 copies/μL of synthetic Plasmodium DNA (50 copies total), comparable to the same reaction run on the bench top. The devices produce visual results in an hour, cost approximately $1, and are self-contained once the device is sealed. Conclusions: The device was capable of carrying out the RPA reaction and detecting meaningful amounts of synthetic Plasmodium DNA in a self-sealing and self-contained device. This device may be a step towards making nucleic acid tests more accessible for malaria detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. Development and validation of a simple algorithm for initiation of CPAP in neonates with respiratory distress in Malawi.
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Hundalani, Shilpa G., Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, Oden, Maria, Kawaza, Kondwani, Gest, Alfred, and Molyneux, Elizabeth
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RESPIRATORY distress syndrome , *RESPIRATORY distress syndrome treatment , *CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure , *BIRTH weight , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background Low-cost bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP) systems have been shown to improve survival in neonates with respiratory distress, in developing countries including Malawi. District hospitals in Malawi implementing CPAP requested simple and reliable guidelines to enable healthcare workers with basic skills and minimal training to determine when treatment with CPAP is necessary. We developed and validated TRY (T: Tone is good, R: Respiratory Distress and Y=Yes) CPAP, a simple algorithm to identify neonates with respiratory distress who would benefit from CPAP. Objective To validate the TRY CPAP algorithm for neonates with respiratory distress in a low-resource setting. Methods We constructed an algorithm using a combination of vital signs, tone and birth weight to determine the need for CPAP in neonates with respiratory distress. Neonates admitted to the neonatal ward of Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, in Blantyre, Malawi, were assessed in a prospective, cross-sectional study. Nurses and paediatricians-in-training assessed neonates to determine whether they required CPAP using the TRY CPAP algorithm. To establish the accuracy of the TRY CPAP algorithm in evaluating the need for CPAP, their assessment was compared with the decision of a neonatologist blinded to the TRY CPAP algorithm findings. Results 325 neonates were evaluated over a 2-month period; 13% were deemed to require CPAP by the neonatologist. The inter-rater reliability with the algorithm was 0.90 for nurses and 0.97 for paediatricians-in-training using the neonatologist's assessment as the reference standard. Conclusions The TRY CPAP algorithm has the potential to be a simple and reliable tool to assist nurses and clinicians in identifying neonates who require treatment with CPAP in low-resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Inhibition of Recombinase Polymerase Amplification by Background DNA: A Lateral Flow-Based Method for Enriching Target DNA.
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Rohrman, Brittany and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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INTEGRASE genetics , *DNA polymerase genetics , *DNA analysis , *NUCLEIC acid isolation methods , *HIV , *GENETICS - Abstract
Recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) may be used to detect a variety of pathogens, often after minimal sample preparation. However, previous work has shown that whole blood inhibits RPA. In this paper, we show that the concentrations of background DNA found in whole blood prevent the amplification of target DNA by RPA. First, using an HIV-1 RPA assay with known concentrations of nonspecific background DNA, we show that RPA tolerates more background DNA when higher HIV-1 target concentrations are present. Then, using three additional assays, we demonstrate that the maximum amount of background DNA that may be tolerated in RPA reactions depends on the DNA sequences used in the assay. We also show that changing the RPA reaction conditions, such as incubation time and primer concentration, has little effect on the ability of RPA to function when high concentrations of background DNA are present. Finally, we develop and characterize a lateral flow-based method for enriching the target DNA concentration relative to the background DNA concentration. This sample processing method enables RPA of 104 copies of HIV-1 DNA in a background of 0–14 µg of background DNA. Without lateral flow sample enrichment, the maximum amount of background DNA tolerated is 2 µg when 106 copies of HIV-1 DNA are present. This method requires no heating or other external equipment, may be integrated with upstream DNA extraction and purification processes, is compatible with the components of lysed blood, and has the potential to detect HIV-1 DNA in infant whole blood with high proviral loads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Formative and Summative Assessment of the IGERT Program in Optical Molecular Bio-Engineering at UT Austin.
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RICHARDS-KORTUM, REBECCA, DAILEY, MICHAEL, and HARRIS, CHARLOTTE
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BIOENGINEERING , *SCIENCE education , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Recent studies of graduate education in science and engineering recommend a new pathway for graduate education, emphasizing interdisciplinary interactions, to prepare a versatile workforce that will be able to contribute in a global environment. The National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Program (NSF IGERT) has funded over 100 projects addressing this need. As these projects progress it is important to assess their successes, best practices and common difficulties. This paper describes one NSF IGERT project, "Graduate Training in Optical Molecular Bio-Engineering," at the University of Texas at Austin, the integrated approach used to carry out its assessment, and how results of the assessment have been used to help achieve the goals of the program. We find that the total number of interdisciplinary scholarly activities (presentations, publications, funded research proposals and patent applications) reported by IGERT faculty and students rose steadily throughout the period of the IGERT award. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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7. Design and Evaluation of ScanCap: A Low-Cost, Reusable Tethered Capsule Endoscope with Blue-Green Illumination Imaging for Unsedated Screening and Early Detection of Barrett's Esophagus.
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Hicheri, Cheima, Azimuddin, Ahad M., Kortum, Alex, Bailey, Joseph, Tang, Yubo, Schwarz, Richard A., Rosen, Daniel, Jain, Shilpa, Mansour, Nabil M., Groth, Shawn, Vasavada, Shaleen, Rao, Ashwin, Maliga, Adrianna, Gallego, Leslie, Carns, Jennifer, Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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Esophageal carcinoma is the sixth-leading cause of cancer death worldwide. A precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) is Barrett's Esophagus (BE). Early-stage diagnosis and treatment of esophageal neoplasia (Barrett's with high-grade dysplasia/intramucosal cancer) increase the five-year survival rate from 10% to 98%. BE is a global challenge; however, current endoscopes for early BE detection are costly and require extensive infrastructure for patient examination and sedation. We describe the design and evaluation of the first prototype of ScanCap, a high-resolution optical endoscopy system with a reusable, low-cost tethered capsule, designed to provide high-definition, blue-green illumination imaging for the early detection of BE in unsedated patients. The tethered capsule (12.8 mm diameter, 35.5 mm length) contains a color camera and rotating mirror and is designed to be swallowed; images are collected as the capsule is retracted manually via the tether. The tether provides electrical power and illumination at wavelengths of 415 nm and 565 nm and transmits data from the camera to a tablet. The ScanCap prototype capsule was used to image the oral mucosa in normal volunteers and ex vivo esophageal resections; images were compared to those obtained using an Olympus CV-180 endoscope. Images of superficial capillaries in intact oral mucosa were clearly visible in ScanCap images. Diagnostically relevant features of BE, including irregular Z-lines, distorted mucosa, and dilated vasculature, were clearly visible in ScanCap images of ex vivo esophageal specimens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. QUANTITATIVE OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY FOR TISSUE DIAGNOSIS.
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Richards-Kortum, Rebecca and Sevick-Muraca, Eva
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OPTICS , *BIOMEDICAL engineering , *TISSUE analysis , *RAMAN spectroscopy - Abstract
Deals with a study which described optical interactions pursued for biomedical applications. Information on light interactions in tissue optics; Fluorescent light transport in tissues; Information on the Raman spectroscopy for tissue diagnosis.
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- 1996
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9. Optical Diagnostics for Early Detection of Oral Cancer.
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Robiyer, Darren and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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ORAL cancer diagnosis , *MEDICAL technology , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *OPTICAL coherence tomography , *SPECTROSCOPIC imaging - Abstract
The article focuses on various optical technologies developed to improve the early detection of cancer in the oral cavity. It states that new optical technologies have the potential to detect early premalignant and malignant lesions in the oral cavity. It discusses the effectiveness of spectroscopic techniques, that illuminate tissue with different wavelength bands of light, fluorescence imaging techniques, that illuminate tissue with ultraviolet (UV) light, and optical coherence tomography.
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- 2010
10. Devices for Low-Resource Health Care.
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Richards-Kortum, Rebecca and Oden, Maria
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CLINICS , *MEDICAL equipment safety measures , *ELECTRICITY in medicine , *RESUSCITATION , *EQUIPMENT & supplies , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
The article offers information on the challenges faced by low resource clinical setting and also reflects on the efforts made by the non-governmental agencies to overcome the challenges around the world. It reveals that low resource settings deal with inadequate electricity due to improper funding and lacks management policies that ensure the safety of precious medical equipment. It mentions that medical company Laerdal Medical has developed neonatal resuscitation to stop deaths of newborns.
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- 2013
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11. Emerging technologies and cervical cancer.
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Follen, Michele, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, Follen, M, and Richards-Kortum, R
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CANCER prevention , *PAP test , *CERVICAL cancer ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Discusses information regarding cervical cancer and the significance of a cervical Pap smear in developing countries. Information on the findings from the Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance/Low-Grade Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions (ASCUS/LSIL, or ALTS) Trial; Number of cervical cancer diagnosed worldwide in 1990; Estimate on the cases of invasive cervical cancer and deaths from this cancer in 1999; Natural history of cervical cancer.
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- 2000
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12. Deployment and assessment of a deep learning model for real-time detection of anal precancer with high frame rate high-resolution microendoscopy.
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Brenes, David, Kortum, Alex, Coole, Jackson, Carns, Jennifer, Schwarz, Richard, Vohra, Imran, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, Liu, Yuxin, Cai, Zhenjian, Sigel, Keith, Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, Gaisa, Michael, and Chiao, Elizabeth
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DEEP learning , *ANAL cancer , *PRECANCEROUS conditions , *HUMAN papillomavirus , *HIV-positive persons , *QUALITY control , *HIV testing kits - Abstract
Anal cancer incidence is significantly higher in people living with HIV as HIV increases the oncogenic potential of human papillomavirus. The incidence of anal cancer in the United States has recently increased, with diagnosis and treatment hampered by high loss-to-follow-up rates. Novel methods for the automated, real-time diagnosis of AIN 2+ could enable "see and treat" strategies, reducing loss-to-follow-up rates. A previous retrospective study demonstrated that the accuracy of a high-resolution microendoscope (HRME) coupled with a deep learning model was comparable to expert clinical impression for diagnosis of AIN 2+ (sensitivity 0.92 [P = 0.68] and specificity 0.60 [P = 0.48]). However, motion artifacts and noise led to many images failing quality control (17%). Here, we present a high frame rate HRME (HF-HRME) with improved image quality, deployed in the clinic alongside a deep learning model and evaluated prospectively for detection of AIN 2+ in real-time. The HF-HRME reduced the fraction of images failing quality control to 4.6% by employing a high frame rate camera that enhances contrast and limits motion artifacts. The HF-HRME outperformed the previous HRME (P < 0.001) and clinical impression (P < 0.0001) in the detection of histopathologically confirmed AIN 2+ with a sensitivity of 0.91 and specificity of 0.87. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Using a peer mentorship approach improved the use of neonatal continuous positive airway pressure and related outcomes in Malawi.
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Asibon, Aba, Lufesi, Norman, Choudhury, Allysha, Olvera, Samantha, Molyneux, Elizabeth, Oden, Maria, Richards‐Kortum, Rebecca, Kawaza, Kondwani, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure , *MEDICAL personnel , *RESEARCH , *SPECIALTY hospitals , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTORING , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Aim: This study evaluated whether peer mentorship was an effective and sustainable way of improving and maintaining knowledge and skills on neonatal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in a low-resource setting with a high turnover of healthcare providers.Methods: The Malawi Ministry of Health recruited five nurses with considerable CPAP experience and provided them with mentorship training from July to August 2014. The mentors then provided 1-week on-site mentorship for 113 colleagues at 10 secondary and one tertiary hospital where gaps in neonatal CPAP use had been identified. CPAP competencies and outcomes were compared 3 months before and after each mentorship.Results: In the 3 months before and after mentorship, the average CPAP competency score increased from 32 ± 4% to 97 ± 2%, while CPAP usage increased from 7% to 23% among eligible neonates. Survival following CPAP mentorship increased from 23% to 35%, but this was not significant due to the small sample size. Both mentees and mentors reported useful transfers of knowledge and skills when using CPAP.Conclusion: Mentorship effectively bridged the knowledge and skills gaps among health workers and increased CPAP use, competency scores and survival rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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14. Engaging Undergraduates in Global Health Technology Innovation.
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Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, Gray, Lauren Vestewig, and Oden, Maria
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TECHNOLOGICAL innovations & society , *WORLD health , *MEDICAL care , *MENTORING in education , *UNDERGRADUATES , *EDUCATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
An essay is presented on a module, titled "Appropriate Design for Global Health." The module is part of a program called Beyond Traditional Borders, which is designed to train undergraduates from all majors to develop novel technology solutions to real-world global health challenges across disciplinary and geographic borders. An in-depth discussion of the module, including student mentoring by health care providers, is presented.
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- 2012
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15. Towards a needle-free diagnosis of malaria: in vivo identification and classification of red and white blood cells containing haemozoin.
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Burnett, Jennifer L., Carns, Jennifer L., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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MALARIA diagnosis , *IN vivo studies , *MICROSCOPY , *ERYTHROCYTES , *LEUCOCYTES - Abstract
Background: Optical detection of circulating haemozoin has been suggested as a needle free method to diagnose malaria using in vivo microscopy. Haemozoin is generated within infected red blood cells by the malaria parasite, serving as a highly specific, endogenous biomarker of malaria. However, phagocytosis of haemozoin by white blood cells which persist after the infection is resolved presents the potential for false positive diagnosis; therefore, the focus of this work is to identify a feature of the haemozoin signal to discriminate between infected red blood cells and haemozoin-containing white blood cells. Methods: Conventional brightfield microscopy of thin film blood smears was used to analyse haemozoin absorbance signal in vitro. Cell type and parasite maturity were morphologically determined using colocalized DAPI staining. The ability of features to discriminate between infected red blood cells and haemozoin-containing white blood cells was evaluated using images of smears from subjects infected with two species of Plasmodium, Plasmodium yoelii and Plasmodium falciparum. Discriminating features identified by blood smear microscopy were characterized in vivo in P. yoelii-infected mice. Results: Two features of the haemozoin signal, haemozoin diameter and normalized intensity difference, were identified as potential parameters to differentiate infected red blood cells and haemozoin-containing white blood cells. Classification performance was evaluated using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, with area under the curve values of 0.89 for the diameter parameter and 0.85 for the intensity parameter when assessed in P. yoelii samples. Similar results were obtained from P. falciparum blood smears, showing an AUC of 0.93 or greater for both classification features. For in vivo investigations, the intensity-based metric was the best classifier, with an AUC of 0.91. Conclusions: This work demonstrates that size and intensity features of haemozoin absorbance signal collected by in vivo microscopy are effective classification metrics to discriminate infected red blood cells from haemozoin-containing white blood cells. This reduces the potential for false positive results associated with optical imaging strategies for in vivo diagnosis of malaria based on the endogenous biomarker haemozoin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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16. Line-scanning confocal microendoscope for nuclear morphometry imaging.
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Yubo Tang, Carns, Jennifer, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
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CONFOCAL fluorescence microscopy , *MOLECULAR probes , *ALGORITHMS , *DIAGNOSIS , *CELL morphology - Abstract
Fiber-optic endomicroscopy is a minimally invasive method to image cellular morphology in vivo. Using a coherent fiber bundle as an image relay, it allows additional imaging optics to be placed at the distal end of the fiber outside the body. In this research, we use this approach to demonstrate a compact, low-cost linescanning confocal fluorescence microendoscope that can be constructed for <$5000. Confocal imaging is enabled without the need for mechanical scanning by synchronizing a digital light projector with the rolling shutter of a CMOS camera. Its axial performance is characterized in comparison with a nonscanned high-resolution microendoscope. We validate the optical sectioning capability of the microendoscope by imaging a two-dimensional phantom and ex vivo mouse esophageal and colon tissues. Results show that optical sectioning using this approach improves visualization of nuclear morphometry and suggest that this low-cost line-scanning microendoscope can be used to evaluate various pathological conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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17. A low-cost, paper-based hybrid capture assay to detect high-risk HPV DNA for cervical cancer screening in low-resource settings.
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Smith, Chelsey A., Chang, Megan M., Kundrod, Kathryn A., Novak, Emilie N., Parra, Sonia G., López, Leticia, Mavume, Celda, Lorenzoni, Cesaltina, Maza, Mauricio, Salcedo, Mila P., Carns, Jennifer L., Baker, Ellen, Montealegre, Jane, Scheurer, Michael, Castle, Philip E., Schmeler, Kathleen M., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
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HUMAN papillomavirus , *CERVICAL cancer , *EARLY detection of cancer , *DNA , *PATHOLOGICAL laboratories , *CELLULAR inclusions , *TESTING laboratories - Abstract
Cervical cancer is a leading cause of cancer death for women in low-resource settings. The World Health Organization recommends that cervical cancer screening programs incorporate HPV DNA testing, but available tests are expensive, require laboratory infrastructure, and cannot be performed at the point-of-care. We developed a two-dimensional paper network (2DPN), hybrid-capture, signal amplification assay and a point-of-care sample preparation protocol to detect high-risk HPV DNA from exfoliated cervical cells within an hour. The test does not require expensive equipment and has an estimated cost of <$3 per test without the need for batching. We evaluated performance of the paper HPV DNA assay with short synthetic and genomic HPV DNA targets, HPV positive and negative cellular samples, and two sets of clinical samples. The first set of clinical samples consisted of 16 biobanked, provider-collected cervical samples from a study in El Salvador previously tested with careHPV and subsequently tested in a controlled laboratory environment. The paper HPV DNA test correctly identified eight of eight HPV-negative clinical samples and seven of eight HPV-positive clinical samples. We then performed a field evaluation of the paper HPV DNA test in a hospital laboratory in Mozambique. Cellular controls generated expected results throughout field testing with fully lyophilized sample preparation and 2DPN reagents. When evaluated with 16 residual self-collected cervicovaginal samples previously tested by the GeneXpert HPV assay ("Xpert"), the accuracy of the HPV DNA paper test in the field was reduced compared to testing in the controlled laboratory environment, with positive results obtained for all eight HPV-positive samples as well as seven of eight HPV-negative samples. Further evaluation showed reduction in performance was likely due in part to increased concentration of exfoliated cells in the self-collected clinical samples from Mozambique compared with provider-collected samples from El Salvador. Finally, a formal usability assessment was conducted with users in El Salvador and Mozambique; the assay was rated as acceptable to perform after minimal training. With additional optimization for higher cell concentrations and inclusion of an internal cellular control, the paper HPV DNA assay offers promise as a low-cost, point-of-care cervical cancer screening test in low-resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Paradigm shift: A new breed of pathologist
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Guillaud, Martial, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, and Follen, Michele
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- 2007
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19. Evaluation of a Point-of-Care Test for Bilirubin in Malawi.
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Shapiro, Alyssa, Anderson, Jessica, Mtenthaonga, Prince, Kumwenda, Watson, Bond, Meaghan, Schwarz, Richard, Carns, Jennifer, Johnston, Ryan, Dube, Queen, Chiume, Msandeni, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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REFERENCE values , *SPECTROPHOTOMETERS , *HEMATOCRIT , *NEONATAL intensive care , *POINT-of-care testing , *SERUM , *CHILDREN'S hospitals , *NEONATAL intensive care units , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COMMERCIAL product evaluation , *COST analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *BILIRUBIN , *DISPOSABLE medical devices , *CHILDREN - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: BiliSpec is a low-cost spectrophotometric reader and disposable paper-based strip to quantify total serum bilirubin from several blood drops. This study was a prospective evaluation of BiliSpec in 2 neonatal wards in Malawi compared with a reference standard bilirubinometer over a large range of bilirubin and hematocrit levels. METHODS: The accuracy of BiliSpec and a transcutaneous bilirubinometer were compared with the reference standard of spectrophotometry for 475 blood samples collected from 375 subjects across a range of total serum bilirubin concentrations from 0.0 to 33.7 mg/dL. The development of error grids to assess the clinical effects of measurement differences is reported. RESULTS: BiliSpec was found to have a mean bias of -0.48 mg/dL and 95% limits of agreement of -5.09 mg/dL to + 4.12 mg/dL. Results show 90.7% of BiliSpec measurements would have resulted in the same clinical decision as the reference standard, whereas 55.0% of transcutaneous bilirubin measurements would have resulted in the same clinical decision as the reference standard. CONCLUSIONS: This evaluation supports use of BiliSpec to provide accurate, low-cost, point-ofcare bilirubin measurements in low-resource hospitals. Future work is needed to evaluate BiliSpec among a larger number of users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Single-tube four-target lateral flow assay detects human papillomavirus types associated with majority of cervical cancers.
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Barra, Maria, Chang, Megan, Salcedo, Mila P., Schmeler, Kathleen, Scheurer, Michael, Maza, Mauricio, Lopez, Leticia, Alfaro, Karla, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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PAPILLOMAVIRUSES , *HUMAN papillomavirus , *CERVICAL cancer , *HUMAN DNA , *POINT-of-care testing , *SAMPLING (Process) , *DNA primers - Abstract
Isothermal nucleic acid amplification methods have many advantages for use at the point of care. However, there is a lack of multiplexed isothermal amplification tests to detect multiple targets in a single reaction, which would be valuable for many diseases, such as infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV). In this study, we developed a multiplexed loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) reaction to detect the three most common hrHPV types that cause cervical cancer (HPV16, HPV18, and HPV45) and a cellular control for sample adequacy. First, we characterized the assay limit of detection (LOD) in a real-time reaction with fluorescence readout; after 30 min of amplification the LOD was 100, 10, and 10 copies/reaction of HPV16, HPV18, and HPV45, respectively, and 0.1 ng/reaction of human genomic DNA (gDNA). Next, we implemented the assay on lateral flow strips, and the LOD was maintained for HPV16 and HPV18, but increased to 100 copies/reaction for HPV45 and to 1 ng/reaction for gDNA. Lastly, we used the LAMP test to evaluate total nucleic acid extracted from 38 clinical samples; compared to qPCR, the LAMP test had 89% sensitivity and 95% specificity. When integrated with sample preparation, this multiplexed LAMP assay could be useful for point-of-care testing. [Display omitted] • We developed a multiplexed LAMP assay for HPV 16, 18, 45 and a cellular control. • The four-plex LAMP assay contains 24 primers in a single reaction. • The assay can detect at least 100 copies/reaction of each HPV type. • There was 92% concordance between LAMP and qPCR for 38 clinical samples. • Next steps include integration with sample processing for point-of-care testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Equipment-Free Incubation of Recombinase Polymerase Amplification Reactions Using Body Heat.
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Crannell, Zachary Austin, Rohrman, Brittany, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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RECOMBINASES , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *BODY temperature , *NUCLEIC acid separation , *MOLECULAR diagnosis , *HIV - Abstract
The development of isothermal amplification platforms for nucleic acid detection has the potential to increase access to molecular diagnostics in low resource settings; however, simple, low-cost methods for heating samples are required to perform reactions. In this study, we demonstrated that human body heat may be harnessed to incubate recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) reactions for isothermal amplification of HIV-1 DNA. After measuring the temperature of mock reactions at 4 body locations, the axilla was chosen as the ideal site for comfortable, convenient incubation. Using commonly available materials, 3 methods for securing RPA reactions to the body were characterized. Finally, RPA reactions were incubated using body heat while control RPA reactions were incubated in a heat block. At room temperature, all reactions with 10 copies of HIV-1 DNA and 90% of reactions with 100 copies of HIV-1 DNA tested positive when incubated with body heat. In a cold room with an ambient temperature of 10 degrees Celsius, all reactions containing 10 copies or 100 copies of HIV-1 DNA tested positive when incubated with body heat. These results suggest that human body heat may provide an extremely low-cost solution for incubating RPA reactions in low resource settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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22. Sample-to-answer, extraction-free, real-time RT-LAMP test for SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal, nasal, and saliva samples: Implications and use for surveillance testing.
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Kundrod, Kathryn A., Natoli, Mary E., Chang, Megan M., Smith, Chelsey A., Paul, Sai, Ogoe, Dereq, Goh, Christopher, Santhanaraj, Akshaya, Price, Anthony, Eldin, Karen W., Patel, Keyur P., Baker, Ellen, Schmeler, Kathleen M., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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COVID-19 testing , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SALIVA , *SALIVA analysis , *NUCLEIC acids , *COVID-19 - Abstract
The global COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for rapid, accurate and accessible nucleic acid tests to enable timely identification of infected individuals. We optimized a sample-to-answer nucleic acid test for SARS-CoV-2 that provides results in <1 hour using inexpensive and readily available reagents. The test workflow includes a simple lysis and viral inactivation protocol followed by direct isothermal amplification of viral RNA using RT-LAMP. The assay was validated using two different instruments, a portable isothermal fluorimeter and a standard thermocycler. Results of the RT-LAMP assay were compared to traditional RT-qPCR for nasopharyngeal swabs, nasal swabs, and saliva collected from a cohort of patients hospitalized due to COVID-19. For all three sample types, positive agreement with RT-LAMP performed using the isothermal fluorimeter was 100% for samples with Ct <30 and 69–91% for samples with Ct <40. Following validation, the test was successfully scaled to test the saliva of up to 400 asymptomatic individuals per day as part of the campus surveillance program at Rice University. Successful development, validation, and scaling of this sample-to-answer, extraction-free real-time RT-LAMP test for SARS-CoV-2 adds a highly adaptable tool to efforts to control the COVID-19 pandemic, and can inform test development strategies for future infectious disease threats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Quantification of HIV-1 DNA Using Real-Time Recombinase Polymerase Amplification.
- Author
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Crannell, Zachary Austin, Rohrman, Brittany, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEIC acids , *HIV , *ALGORITHMS , *RECOMBINASES , *DNA , *GENETICS - Abstract
Although recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) has many advantages for the detection of pathogenic nucleic adds in point-of-care applications, RPA has not yet been implemented to quantify sample concentration using a standard curve. Here, we describe a real-time RPA assay with an internal positive control and an algorithm that analyzes realtime fluorescence data to quantify HIV-1 DNA We show that DNA concentration and the onset of detectable amplification are correlated by an exponential standard curve. In a set of experiments in which the standard curve and algorithm were used to analyze and quantify additional DNA samples, the algorithm predicted an average concentration within 1 order of magnitude of the correct concentration for all HIV-1 DNA concentrations tested. These results suggest that quantitative RPA (qRPA) may serve as a powerful tool for quantifying nucleic adds and may be adapted for use in single-sample point-of-care diagnostic systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Development and Use of Heuristics to Evaluate Neonatal Medical Devices for Use in Low-Resource Settings.
- Author
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Johnston, Jake, Asma, Elizabeth, Acemyan, Claudia Ziegler, Oden, Maria, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, and Kortum, Philip
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL equipment , *HEURISTIC , *MEDICAL supplies , *MIDDLE-income countries , *HUMAN resources departments - Abstract
Previous research has shown that for several domains and environments, developing and using domain-specific heuristics can effectively supplement general heuristics to capture additional usability problems. However, no existing heuristic set specifically addresses medical devices for use in low-resource settings, such as hospitals in low- and middle-income countries. These settings are limited by a lack of critical resources such as medical consumables, equipment, and human resources; therefore, they require devices that meet unique usability challenges. In this paper, we describe the development and use of domain-specific heuristics to evaluate neonatal medical devices intended for low-resource settings. Five additional heuristics were developed to account for specific usability needs in low-resource settings including cleanability, maintainability and reparability, low workload, minimize discomfort, and access to baby. Three human factors experts independently applied 19 heuristics (14 standard plus 5 new) to 23 neonatal medical device product options. Evaluators identified 36 (9%) additional heuristic violations when applying the newly developed heuristic set focused on low-resource usability needs. Results support the ability of domain-specific heuristics to identify potential usability problems that would not be captured using only standard heuristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
25. Gold nanoparticle aggregation for quantification of oligonucleotides: Optimization and increased dynamic range
- Author
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Cordray, Michael S., Amdahl, Matthew, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
- Subjects
- *
GOLD nanoparticles , *CLUSTERING of particles , *OLIGONUCLEOTIDES , *MATHEMATICAL optimization , *MOLECULAR dynamics , *CHEMICAL detectors , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *SOLUTION (Chemistry) - Abstract
Abstract: A variety of assays have been proposed to detect small quantities of nucleic acids at the point of care. One approach relies on target-induced aggregation of gold nanoparticles functionalized with oligonucleotide sequences complementary to adjacent regions on the targeted sequence. In the presence of the target sequence, the gold nanoparticles aggregate, producing an easily detectable shift in the optical scattering properties of the solution. The major limitations of this assay are that it requires heating and that long incubation times are needed to produce a result. This study aimed to optimize the assay conditions and optical readout, with the goals of eliminating the need for heating and reducing the time to result without sacrificing sensitivity or dynamic range. By optimizing assay conditions and measuring the spectrum of scattered light at the end point of incubation, we found that the assay is capable of producing quantifiable results at room temperature in 30min with a linear dynamic range spanning 150amol to 15fmol of target. If changes in light scattering are measured dynamically during the incubation process, the linear range can be expanded 2-fold, spanning 50amol to 500fmol, while decreasing the time to result to 10min. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Optical molecular imaging for detection of Barrett's-associated neoplasia.
- Author
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Thekkek, Nadhi, Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
IMAGING of cancer , *BARRETT'S esophagus , *CANCER invasiveness , *LIGHT scattering , *CANCER diagnosis , *DIAGNOSIS of esophageal cancer , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Recent advancements in the endoscopic imaging of Barrett's esophagus can be used to probe a wide range of optical properties that are altered with neoplastic progression. This review summarizes relevant changes in optical properties as well as imaging approaches that measures those changes. Wide-field imaging approaches include narrow-band imaging that measures changes in light scattering and absorption, and autofluorescence imaging that measure changes in endogenous fluorophores. High-resolution imaging approaches include optical coherence tomography, endocytoscopy, confocal microendoscopy, and high-resolution microendoscopy. These technologies, some coupled with an appropriate contrast agent, can measure differences in glandular morphology, nuclear morphology, or vascular alterations associated with neoplasia. Advances in targeted contrast agents are further discussed. Studies that have explored these technologies are highlighted; as are the advantages and limitations of each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Use of In Vivo Real-Time Optical Imaging for Esophageal Neoplasia.
- Author
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Vila, Peter M., Thekkek, Nadhi, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, and Anandasabapathy, Sharmila
- Subjects
- *
ESOPHAGEAL cancer , *BARRETT'S esophagus , *ESOPHAGEAL abnormalities , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *OPTICAL images - Abstract
Esophageal adenocarcinoma carries a poor prognosis, as it typically presents at a late stage. Thus, a major research priority is the development of novel diagnostic-imaging strategies that can detect neoplastic lesions earlier and more accurately than current techniques. Advances in optical imaging allow clinicians to obtain real-time histopathologic information with instant visualization of cellular architecture and the potential to identify neoplastic tissue. The various endoscopic imaging modalities for esophageal neoplasia can be grouped into 2 major categories: (1) wide-field imaging, a comparatively lower-resolution view for imaging larger surface areas, and (2) high-resolution imaging, which allows individual cells to be visualized. This review will provide an overview of the various forms of real-time optical imaging in the diagnosis and management of Barrett's esophagus and esophageal adenocarcinoma. Mt Sinai J Med 78:894-904, 2011. © 2011 Mount Sinai School of Medicine [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Optical molecular imaging for detection of Barrett's-associated neoplasia.
- Author
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Thekkek, Nadhi, Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
BARRETT'S esophagus , *OPTICAL coherence tomography , *BIOFLUORESCENCE , *DISEASE progression , *CONTRAST media , *FLUOROPHORES - Abstract
Recent advancements in the endoscopic imaging of Barrett's esophagus can be used to probe a wide range of optical properties that are altered with neoplastic progression. This review summarizes relevant changes in optical properties as well as imaging approaches that measures those changes. Wide-field imaging approaches include narrow-band imaging that measures changes in light scattering and absorption, and autofluorescence imaging that measure changes in endogenous fluorophores. High-resolution imaging approaches include optical coherence tomography, endocytoscopy, confocal microendoscopy, and high-resolution microendoscopy. These technologies, some coupled with an appropriate contrast agent, can measure differences in glandular morphology, nuclear morphology, or vascular alterations associated with neoplasia. Advances in targeted contrast agents are further discussed. Studies that have explored these technologies are highlighted; as are the advantages and limitations of each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Optical molecular imaging for detection of Barrett's-associated neoplasia.
- Author
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Thekkek, Nadhi, Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
MOLECULAR diagnosis , *BARRETT'S esophagus , *BIOFLUORESCENCE , *MOLECULAR probes , *DISEASE progression , *OPTICAL images , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Recent advancements in the endoscopic imaging of Barrett's esophagus can be used to probe a wide range of optical properties that are altered with neoplastic progression. This review summarizes relevant changes in optical properties as well as imaging approaches that measures those changes. Wide-field imaging approaches include narrow-band imaging that measures changes in light scattering and absorption, and autofluorescence imaging that measure changes in endogenous fluorophores. High-resolution imaging approaches include optical coherence tomography, endocytoscopy, confocal microendoscopy, and high-resolution microendoscopy. These technologies, some coupled with an appropriate contrast agent, can measure differences in glandular morphology, nuclear morphology, or vascular alterations associated with neoplasia. Advances in targeted contrast agents are further discussed. Studies that have explored these technologies are highlighted; as are the advantages and limitations of each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Optical imaging for cervical cancer detection: solutions for a continuing global problem.
- Author
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Thekkek, Nadhi, Richards-Jortum, Rebecca, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
CANCER in women , *CERVICAL cancer , *WOMEN & death , *CANCER prevention , *MEDICAL screening , *DIGITAL camera equipment , *OPTICAL images , *BIOMARKERS - Abstract
Cervical cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for women in developing countries. Optical technologies can improve the accuracy and availability of cervical cancer screening. For example, battery-powered digital cameras can obtain multi-spectral images of the entire cervix, highlighting suspicious areas, and high-resolution optical technologies can further interrogate such areas, providing in vivo diagnosis with high sensitivity and specificity. In addition, targeted contrast agents can highlight changes in biomarkers of cervical neoplasia. Such advances should provide a much needed global approach to cervical cancer prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Initial Results of First In Vivo Imaging of Bladder Lesions Using a High-Resolution Confocal Microendoscope.
- Author
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Tang, Yubo, Kortum, Alex, Vohra, Imran, Schwarz, Richard A., Carns, Jennifer, Kannady, Christopher R., Clavell-Hernandez, Jonathan, Hu, Zhihong, Dhanani, Nadeem, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
CYSTOSCOPY , *BLADDER cancer , *BLADDER , *OPTICAL coherence tomography - Abstract
Purpose: Conventional cystoscopy plays an important role in detection of bladder cancer; however, it is difficult to differentiate benign and neoplastic lesions based on cystoscopic appearance alone. Advanced microscopic modalities, such as confocal laser endomicroscopy and optical coherence tomography, have been shown to provide critical histopathologic information to help identify neoplastic bladder lesions in real time, but their availability and clinical adoption are limited due to a high cost. In this study, we present the first use of a novel and low-cost ($ <5000) confocal high-resolution microendoscope (confocal HRME) for in vivo imaging of bladder lesions. Materials and Methods: In a cohort of 15 patients undergoing white light cystoscopy as part of their standard of care, high-resolution images of proflavine-stained bladder lesions were acquired in vivo using the confocal HRME. Based on these images, we evaluated the ability of the confocal HRME to visualize uroepithelium with subcellular resolution and high contrast. Furthermore, we analyzed the cellular architecture and staining patterns of benign and neoplastic bladder lesions in confocal HRME images and compared results to that of standard cystoscopy and histopathology. Results:In vivo imaging in the pilot study demonstrates that the confocal HRME resolved subcellular structures of bladder uroepithelium with high contrast. In a wide range of clinical conditions from normal bladder wall to benign and neoplastic lesions, confocal HRME images revealed important diagnostic features that correlated to histopathology. Conclusions: The confocal HRME provides an affordable, portable, and easy-to-use tool to allow real-time and high-contrast subcellular characterization of bladder lesions, well suited for bladder cancer detection in community and resource-constrained settings. The ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02340650. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Optical spectroscopy for detection of neoplasia
- Author
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Sokolov, Konstantin, Follen, Michele, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
FLUORESCENCE , *REFLECTANCE spectroscopy - Abstract
Fluorescence and reflectance spectroscopy provide the ability to assess tissue structure and metabolism in vivo in real time, providing improved diagnosis of pre-cancerous lesions. Reflectance spectroscopy can probe changes in epithelial nuclei that are important in pre-cancer detection, such as mean nuclear diameter, nuclear size distribution and nuclear refractive index. Fluorescence spectroscopy can probe changes in epithelial cell metabolism, by assessing mitochondrial fluorophores, and epithelial-stromal interactions, by assessing the decrease in collagen crosslink fluorescence that occurs with pre-cancer. Thus, fluorescence and reflectance spectroscopy provide complementary information useful for pre-cancer diagnosis. Tissue engineering provides three-dimensional cell cultures that can be used to further explore the relationship between tissue structure and biological events important in cancer development and progression. In the future, improving our understanding of the biological changes that can be assessed using spectroscopy will not only improve optical techniques but also provide new tools to better understand cancer biology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. How to transform the practice of engineering to meet global health needs.
- Author
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Niemeier, Deb, Gombachika, Harry, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
ENGINEERING design , *SANITARY engineering , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation on engineering , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation on public health , *MOBILE health , *WORLD health , *SANITATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this article the author discuss the need to adopt new approaches to engineering design that reflect the needs and constraints of low-resource settings. Topics include the adoption of design for scarcity and scalability, called frugal design, by engineering and international aid communities, features of mobile health (mHealth) technology that might be most effective in engineering design, and traditional solutions for controlling diseases such as malaria, such as better water management.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. In vitro comparison of performance including imposed work of breathing of CPAP systems used in low-resource settings.
- Author
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Heenan, Megan, Rojas, Jose D., Oden, Z. Maria, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure , *GAS flow , *RESPIRATION - Abstract
Respiratory distress due to preterm birth is a significant cause of death in low-resource settings. The introduction of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) systems to treat respiratory distress significantly reduced mortality in high-resource settings, but CPAP was only recently introduced in low-resource settings due to cost and infrastructure limitations. We evaluated pressure stability and imposed work of breathing (iWOB) of five CPAP systems used in low resource settings: the Fisher and Paykel bubble CPAP, the Diamedica baby CPAP, the Medijet nCPAP generator, and the first (2015) and second (2017) generation commercially available Pumani CPAPs. Pressure changes due to fresh gas flow were evaluated for each system by examining the relationship between flow and pressure at the patient interface for four pressures generated at the bottle (0, 3, 5, and 7 cm H2O); for the Medijet nCPAP generator, no bottle was used. The slope of the resulting relationship was used to calculate system resistance. Poiseuille's law of resistance was used to investigate significant contributors to resistance. Resistance ranged from 0.05 to 1.40 cmH2OL/min ; three CPAP devices had resistances < 0.4 cmH2OL/min : the Fisher and Paykel system, the Diamedica system, and the second generation Pumani bubble CPAP. The other two systems, the Medijet nCPAP generator and the first generation Pumani bCPAP, had resistances >1.0 cmH2OL/min. Imposed WOB was measured using an ASL5000 test lung to simulate the breath cycle for an infant (5.5 kg), a term neonate (4.0 kg), and a preterm neonate (2.5 kg). Imposed WOB ranged from 1.4 to 39.5 mJ/breath across all systems and simulated infant sizes. Changes in pressure generated by fresh gas flow, resistance, and iWOB differ between the five systems evaluated under ideal laboratory conditions. The available literature does not indicate that these differences affect clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A PIK3CA transgenic mouse model with chemical carcinogen exposure mimics human oral tongue tumorigenesis.
- Author
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Tan, Melody T., Wu, Jean G., Callejas‐Valera, Juan Luis, Schwarz, Richard A., Gillenwater, Ann M., Richards‐Kortum, Rebecca R., and Vigneswaran, Nadarajah
- Subjects
- *
TRANSGENIC mice , *CARCINOGENS , *CHEMICAL models , *PRECANCEROUS conditions , *HUMAN carcinogenesis , *DYSPLASIA , *SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma - Abstract
Summary: Oral cancer causes significant global mortality and has a five‐year survival rate of around 64%. Poor prognosis results from late‐stage diagnosis, highlighting an important need to develop better approaches to detect oral premalignant lesions (OPLs) and identify which OPLs are at highest risk of progression to oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). An appropriate animal model that reflects the genetic, histologic, immunologic, molecular and gross visual features of human OSCC would aid in the development and evaluation of early detection and risk assessment strategies. Here, we present an experimental PIK3CA + 4NQO transgenic mouse model of oral carcinogenesis that combines the PIK3CA oncogene mutation with oral exposure to the chemical carcinogen 4NQO, an alternate experimental transgenic mouse model with PIK3CA as well as E6 and E7 mutations, and an existing wild‐type mouse model based on oral exposure to 4NQO alone. We compare changes in dorsal and ventral tongue gross visual appearance, histologic features and molecular biomarker expression over a time course of carcinogenesis. Both transgenic models exhibit cytological and architectural features of dysplasia that mimic human disease and exhibit slightly increased staining for Ki‐67, a cell proliferation marker. The PIK3CA + 4NQO model additionally exhibits consistent lymphocytic infiltration, presents with prominent dorsal and ventral tongue tumours, and develops cancer quickly relative to the other models. Thus, the PIK3CA + 4NQO model recapitulates the multistep genetic model of human oral carcinogenesis and host immune response in carcinogen‐induced tongue cancer, making it a useful resource for future OSCC studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Neonatal CPAP for Respiratory Distress Across Malawi and Mortality.
- Author
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Carns, Jennifer, Kawaza, Kondwani, Liaghati-Mobarhan, Sara, Asibon, Aba, Quinn, Mary K., Chalira, Alfred, Lufesi, Norman, Molyneux, Elizabeth, Oden, Maria, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
RESPIRATORY distress syndrome treatment , *NEWBORN screening , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EVALUATION of medical care , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PUBLIC hospitals , *QUALITY assurance , *RESPIRATORY distress syndrome , *CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Our aim in this observational study was to monitor continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) usage and outcomes in newborn wards at 26 government hospitals in Malawi after the introduction of CPAP as part of a quality-improvement initiative. CPAP was implemented in 3 phases from 2013 through 2015. METHODS: Survival to discharge was analyzed for neonates treated with nasal oxygen and/or CPAP with admission weights of 1 to 2.49 kg at 24 government hospitals with transfer rates,15%. This analysis includes neonates admitted with respiratory illness for 5.5 months before (621 neonates) and 15 months immediately after CPAP implementation (1836 neonates). A follow-up data analysis was completed for neonates treated with CPAP at all hospitals during an additional 11 months (194 neonates). RESULTS: On implementation of CPAP, survival to discharge improved for all neonates admitted with respiratory distress (48.6% vs 54.5%; P = .012) and for those diagnosed with respiratory distress syndrome (39.8% vs 48.3%; P = .042). There were no significant differences in outcomes for neonates treated with CPAP during the implementation and follow-up periods. Hypothermia on admission was pervasive and associated with poor outcomes. Neonates with normal mean temperatures during CPAP treatment experienced the highest survival rates (65.7% for all neonates treated with CPAP and 60.0% for those diagnosed with respiratory distress syndrome). CONCLUSIONS: A nurse-led CPAP service can improve outcomes for neonates in respiratory distress in low-resource settings. However, the results show that real-world improvements in survival may be limited without access to comprehensive newborn care, especially for small and sick infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Low-cost, high-resolution imaging for detecting cervical precancer in medically-underserved areas of Texas.
- Author
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Parra, Sonia G., Rodriguez, Ana M., Cherry, Katelin D., Schwarz, Richard A., Gowen, Rose M., Guerra, Laura B., Milbourne, Andrea M., Toscano, Paul A., Fisher-Hoch, Susan P., Schmeler, Kathleen M., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
- Subjects
- *
PRECANCEROUS conditions , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *COLPOSCOPY , *CERVICAL cancer - Abstract
Cervical cancer rates in the United States have declined since the 1940's, however, cervical cancer incidence remains elevated in medically-underserved areas, especially in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV) along the Texas-Mexico border. High-resolution microendoscopy (HRME) is a low-cost, in vivo imaging technique that can identify high-grade precancerous cervical lesions (CIN2+) at the point-of-care. The goal of this study was to evaluate the performance of HRME in medically-underserved areas in Texas, comparing results to a tertiary academic medical center. HRME was evaluated in five different outpatient clinical settings, two in Houston and three in the RGV, with medical providers of varying skill and training. Colposcopy, followed by HRME imaging, was performed on eligible women. The sensitivity and specificity of traditional colposcopy and colposcopy followed by HRME to detect CIN2+ were compared and HRME image quality was evaluated. 174 women (227 cervical sites) were included in the final analysis, with 12% (11% of cervical sites) diagnosed with CIN2+ on histopathology. On a per-site basis, a colposcopic impression of low-grade precancer or greater had a sensitivity of 84% and a specificity of 45% to detect CIN2+. While there was no significant difference in sensitivity (76%, p = 0.62), the specificity when using HRME was significantly higher than that of traditional colposcopy (56%, p = 0.01). There was no significant difference in HRME image quality between clinical sites (p = 0.77) or medical providers (p = 0.33). HRME imaging increased the specificity for detecting CIN2+ when compared to traditional colposcopy. HRME image quality remained consistent across different clinical settings. • High-resolution microendoscopy provides real time evaluation to detect high-grade cervical precancer without a biopsy. • High-resolution microendoscopy significantly decreased the number of false positives compared with traditional colposcopy. • High-resolution microendoscope image quality remained consistent across different clinical settings in urban and rural Texas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Low-Cost Instructional Apparatus to Improve Training for Cervical Cancer Screening and Prevention.
- Author
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Parra, Sonia, Oden, Maria, Schmeler, Kathleen, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, and Rice360 Student Team,
- Abstract
Background: Cervical cancer remains one of the leading causes of cancer for women in medically underserved areas. This is in part due to a lack of trained clinicians to provide the necessary diagnosis and treatment of precancerous lesions to prevent cervical cancer. Increasing medical provider knowledge and skills is important for the early detection and prevention of cervical precancer and cancer in medically underserved areas of the United States and globally.Method: LUCIA is a low-cost, universal cervical cancer instructional apparatus that can be used to teach and practice a variety of essential skills for cervical cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment, including: visual inspection with acetic acid, Pap and human papillomavirus DNA specimen collection, colposcopy, endocervical curettage, cervical biopsy, cryotherapy, and loop electrosurgical excision procedure.Experience: LUCIA was used to provide hands-on training in six courses held in Texas (n=3), El Salvador (n=1), and Mozambique, Africa (n=2). Standardized provider evaluations were administered at three of these courses and resulted in mean scores of 4.12/5 for usefulness, 4.46/5 for skill improvement, and 4.43/5 for ease of skill evaluation.Conclusion: LUCIA provides dynamic, real-time feedback that allows trainees to learn and practice important skills related to cervical cancer prevention while simulating a patient exam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A mobile-phone based high-resolution microendoscope to image cervical precancer.
- Author
-
Grant, Benjamin D., Quang, Timothy, Possati-Resende, Júlio César, Scapulatempo-Neto, Cristovam, de Macedo Matsushita, Graziela, Mauad, Edmundo Carvalho, Stoler, Mark H., Castle, Philip E., Guerreiro Fregnani, José Humberto Tavares, Schmeler, Kathleen M., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
ENDOSCOPES , *CERVICAL cancer diagnosis , *MEDICAL screening , *ACETIC acid , *MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Nearly 90% of cervical cancer cases and deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries that lack comprehensive national HPV immunization and cervical cancer screening programs. In these settings, it is difficult to implement screening programs due to a lack of infrastructure and shortage of trained personnel. Screening programs based on visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) have been successfully implemented in some low-resource settings. However, VIA has poor specificity and up to 90% of patients receiving treatment based on a positive VIA exam are over-treated. A number of studies have suggested that high-resolution cervical imaging to visualize nuclear morphology in vivo can improve specificity by better distinguishing precancerous and benign lesions. To enable high-resolution imaging in low-resource settings, we developed a portable, low-cost, high-resolution microendoscope that uses a mobile phone to detect and display images of cervical epithelium in vivo with subcellular resolution. The device was fabricated for less than $2,000 using commercially available optical components including filters, an LED and triplet lenses assembled in a 3D-printed opto-mechanical mount. We show that the mobile high-resolution microendoscope achieves similar resolution and signal-to-background ratio as previously reported high-resolution microendoscope systems using traditional cameras and computers to detect and display images. Finally, we demonstrate the ability of the mobile high-resolution microendoscope to image normal and precancerous squamous epithelium of the cervix in vivo in a gynecological referral clinic in Barretos, Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Development of an integrated multimodal optical imaging system with real-time image analysis for the evaluation of oral premalignant lesions.
- Author
-
Yang, Eric C., Vohra, Imran S., Badaoui, Hawraa, Schwarz, Richard A., Cherry, Katelin D., Quang, Timothy, Jacob, Justin, Lang, Alex, Bass, Nancy, Rodriguez, Jessica, Williams, Michelle D., Vigneswaran, Nadarajah, Gillenwater, Ann M., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
- Subjects
- *
BIOFLUORESCENCE , *IMAGING systems , *PRECANCEROUS conditions , *IMAGE analysis , *OPTICAL images , *ORAL cancer - Abstract
Oral premalignant lesions (OPLs), such as leukoplakia, are at risk of malignant transformation to oral cancer. Clinicians can elect to biopsy OPLs and assess them for dysplasia, a marker of increased risk. However, it is challenging to decide which OPLs need a biopsy and to select a biopsy site. We developed a multimodal optical imaging system (MMIS) that fully integrates the acquisition, display, and analysis of macroscopic whitelight (WL), autofluorescence (AF), and high-resolution microendoscopy (HRME) images to noninvasively evaluate OPLs. WL and AF images identify suspicious regions with high sensitivity, which are explored at higher resolution with the HRME to improve specificity. Key features include a heat map that delineates suspicious regions according to AF images, and real-time image analysis algorithms that predict pathologic diagnosis at imaged sites. Representative examples from ongoing studies of the MMIS demonstrate its ability to identify high-grade dysplasia in OPLs that are not clinically suspicious, and to avoid unnecessary biopsies of benign OPLs that are clinically suspicious. The MMIS successfully integrates optical imaging approaches (WL, AF, and HRME) at multiple scales for the noninvasive evaluation of OPLs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Is Proflavine Exposure Associated with Disease Progression in Women with Cervical Dysplasia? A Brief Report.
- Author
-
Pantano, Naitielle, Hunt, Brady, Schwarz, Richard A., Parra, Sonia, Cherry, Katelin, Possati‐Resende, Júlio César, Longatto‐Filho, Adhemar, Fregnani, José Humberto Tavares Guerreiro, Castle, Philip E., Schmeler, Kathleen, and Richards‐Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *CERVICAL cancer , *CERVICAL intraepithelial neoplasia , *ONCOLOGY , *COLPOSCOPY - Abstract
Proflavine is an acridine dye used with high‐resolution microendoscopy for in vivo diagnostic evaluation of cervical epithelial cells. However, there are concerns that even short‐term exposure of cervical tissue to dilute proflavine may increase cervical cancer risk. We performed a retrospective analysis of women referred for colposcopy to Barretos Cancer Hospital comparing the risk of cervical disease progression in those whose cervical tissue was (n = 232) or was not exposed (n = 160) to proflavine. Patients in both groups underwent treatment and follow‐up based on histopathologic results and per the local standards of care. Progression of disease was evaluated by comparing histopathology from the initial visit to the worst subsequent histopathology result from all follow‐up visits. Mean duration of follow‐up was 18.7 and 20.1 months for the proflavine‐exposed and controls groups, respectively. There were no significant differences in disease progression from normal/CIN1 to CIN2/3 or from any initial diagnosis to invasive cancer between the proflavine exposed and control groups overall. Risks of cervical dysplasia progression observed in this study are in agreement with those of the natural history of cervical cancer. Our results suggest that cervical exposure to dilute proflavine does not increase the risk of cervical precancer and cancer. We performed a retrospective analysis of women referred for colposcopy to Barretos Cancer Hospital comparing the risk of cervical disease progression in those whose cervical tissue was (n = 232) or was not exposed (n = 160) to proflavine during an in vivo microendoscopy procedure. There were no significant differences in disease progression from normal/CIN1 to CIN2/3 or from any initial diagnosis to invasive cancer between the proflavine‐exposed and control groups overall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Quantitative analysis of in vivo high-resolution microendoscopic images for the detection of neoplastic colorectal polyps.
- Author
-
Yubo Tang, Polydorides, Alexandros D., Anandasabapathy, Sharmila, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
- Subjects
- *
COLON polyps , *COLON cancer diagnosis , *COLONOSCOPY , *MEDICAL screening , *CANCER invasiveness - Abstract
Colonoscopy is routinely performed for colorectal cancer screening but lacks the capability to accurately characterize precursor lesions and early cancers. High-resolution microendoscopy (HRME) is a low-cost imaging tool to visualize colorectal polyps with subcellular resolution. We present a computer-aided algorithm to evaluate HRME images of colorectal polyps and classify neoplastic from benign lesions. Using histopathology as the gold standard, clinically relevant features based on luminal morphology and texture are quantified to build the classification algorithm. We demonstrate that adenomatous polyps can be identified with a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and 80% using a two-feature linear discriminant model in a pilot test set. The classification algorithm presented here offers an objective framework to detect adenomatous lesions in the colon with high accuracy and can potentially improve real-time assessment of colorectal polyps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Impact of hypothermia on implementation of CPAP for neonatal respiratory distress syndrome in a low-resource setting.
- Author
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Carns, Jennifer, Kawaza, Kondwani, Quinn, MK, Miao, Yinsen, Guerra, Rudy, Molyneux, Elizabeth, Oden, Maria, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
RESPIRATORY distress syndrome , *HYPOTHERMIA , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *OXYGEN , *DIAGNOSIS ,NEWBORN infant health - Abstract
Background: Neonatal hypothermia is widely associated with increased risks of morbidity and mortality, but remains a pervasive global problem. No studies have examined the impact of hypothermia on outcomes for preterm infants treated with CPAP for respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Methods: This retrospective analysis assessed the impact of hypothermia on outcomes of 65 neonates diagnosed with RDS and treated with either nasal oxygen (N = 17) or CPAP (N = 48) in a low-resource setting. A classification tree approach was used to develop a model predicting survival for subjects diagnosed with RDS. Findings: Survival to discharge was accurately predicted based on three variables: mean temperature, treatment modality, and mean respiratory rate. None of the 23 neonates with a mean temperature during treatment below 35.8°C survived to discharge, regardless of treatment modality. Among neonates with a mean temperature exceeding 35.8°C, the survival rate was 100% for the 31 neonates treated with CPAP and 36.4% for the 11 neonates treated with nasal oxygen (p<0.001). For neonates treated with CPAP, outcomes were poor if more than 50% of measured temperatures indicated hypothermia (5.6% survival). In contrast, all 30 neonates treated with CPAP and with more than 50% of temperature measurements above 35.8°C survived to discharge, regardless of initial temperature. Conclusion: The results of our study suggest that successful implementation of CPAP to treat RDS in low-resource settings will require aggressive action to prevent persistent hypothermia. However, our results show that even babies who are initially cold can do well on CPAP with proper management of hypothermia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Paper-based detection of HIV-1 drug resistance using isothermal amplification and an oligonucleotide ligation assay.
- Author
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Natoli, Mary E., Rohrman, Brittany A., De Santiago, Carolina, van Zyl, Gert U., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R.
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- *
ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *VIRAL load , *HIV infections , *THERAPEUTICS , *DRUG resistance , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay - Abstract
Regular HIV-1 viral load monitoring is the standard of care to assess antiretroviral therapy effectiveness in resource-rich settings. Persistently elevated viral loads indicate virologic failure (VF), which warrants HIV drug resistance testing (HIVDRT) to allow individualized regimen switches. However, in settings lacking access to HIVDRT, clinical decisions are often made based on symptoms, leading to unnecessary therapy switches and increased costs of care. This work presents a proof-of-concept assay to detect M184V, the most common drug resistance mutation after first-line antiretroviral therapy failure, in a paper format. The first step isothermally amplifies a section of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase containing M184V using a recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) assay. Then, an oligonucleotide ligation assay (OLA) is used to selectively label the mutant and wild type amplified sequences. Finally, a lateral flow enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) differentiates between OLA-labeled products with or without M184V. Our method shows 100% specificity and 100% sensitivity when tested with samples that contained 200 copies of mutant DNA and 800 copies of wild type DNA prior to amplification. When integrated with sample preparation, this method may detect HIV-1 drug resistance at a low cost and at a rural hospital laboratory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Point-of-care device to diagnose and monitor neonatal jaundice in low-resource settings.
- Author
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Keahey, Pelham A., Simeral, Mathieu L., Schroder, Kristofer J., Bond, Meaghan M., Richards-Kortum, Rebecca R., Mtenthaonnga, Prince J., Dube, Queen, and Miros, Robert H.
- Subjects
- *
NEONATAL jaundice , *BILIRUBIN , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *HYPERBILIRUBINEMIA , *MORTALITY - Abstract
Newborns are at increased risk of jaundice, a condition in which excess bilirubin accumulates in blood. Left untreated, jaundice can lead to neurological impairment and death. Jaundice resulting from unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia is easily treated with exposure to blue light and phototherapy systems have been developed for low-resource settings; however, there are no appropriate solutions to diagnose and monitor jaundice in these settings. To address this need we present BiliSpec, a low-cost reader and disposable lateral flow card designed to measure the concentration of total bilirubin from several drops of blood at the point of care. We evaluated the performance of BiliSpec, using blood from normal volunteers spiked with varying amounts of bilirubin; results measured using BiliSpec correlated well with a reference laboratory bilirubinometer (r = 0.996). We then performed a pilot clinical study using BiliSpec to measure total bilirubin in neonates at risk for jaundice at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. Concentrations measured using BiliSpec correlated well with those measured using a laboratory reference standard in 94 patient samples ranging from 1.1 mg/dL to 23.0 mg/dL in concentration (r = 0.973). The mean difference between bilirubin levels measured with BiliSpec and the reference standard was 0.3 mg/dL (95% CI: -1.7-2.2 mg/dL). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Point-of-care diagnostics to improve maternal and neonatal health in low-resource settings.
- Author
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Majors, Catherine E., Smith, Chelsey A., Natoli, Mary E., Kundrod, Kathryn A., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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- *
NEONATAL anatomy , *MATERNAL health services , *PREGNANCY complications , *DEATH rate , *POINT-of-care testing - Abstract
Each day, approximately 830 women and 7400 newborns die from complications during pregnancy and childbirth. Improving maternal and neonatal health will require bringing rapid diagnosis and treatment to the point of care in low-resource settings. However, to date there are few diagnostic tools available that can be used at the point of care to detect the leading causes of maternal and neonatal mortality in low-resource settings. Here we review both commercially available diagnostics and technologies that are currently in development to detect the leading causes of maternal and neonatal mortality, highlighting key gaps in development where innovative design could increase access to technology and enable rapid diagnosis at the bedside. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Evaluation of a low-cost, low-power syringe pump to deliver magnesium sulfate intravenously to pre-eclamptic women in a Malawian referral hospital.
- Author
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Skerrett, Erica, Kommwa, Edward, Maynard, Kelley, Juarez, Alexa, Mataya, Ronald, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, and Oden, Z. Maria
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MAGNESIUM sulfate , *ECLAMPSIA , *SYRINGES , *HOSPITAL care , *INTRAVENOUS therapy , *CLINICAL trials , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL referrals , *PREECLAMPSIA , *RESEARCH , *PILOT projects , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ECONOMICS ,INTRAVENOUS therapy equipment - Abstract
Background: Magnesium sulfate is an affordable and effective treatment for pre-eclampsia and eclampsia. In settings where infusion pumps are not available to regulate the flow rate of intravenous delivery, healthcare providers must administer magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) via time-consuming and painful, large-volume intramuscular injections. As an alternative to costly commercially available syringe pumps, we developed AutoSyp, an accurate, low-cost, and low-powered syringe pump designed to meet the needs and constraints these low-resource settings. This paper describes results of a pilot study to evaluate the feasibility of using AutoSyp to administer MgSO4 intravenously to women suffering from pre-eclampsia at a referral hospital in Blantyre, Malawi.Methods: AutoSyp was programmed to deliver MgSO4 following the Zuspan regimen to pregnant and post-partum women suffering from pre-eclampsia at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blatnyre, Malawi. Given the selection of either loading or maintenance dose on AutoSyp's user interface, the flow rate was automatically programmed to dispense 60 mL/h or 5 mL/h of 20% MgSO4 solution, respectively. During each treatment, the dispensed volume was automatically calculated by the device based on the plunger position and stored on a computer for accuracy analysis of the mean flow rate and total volume delivered. The clinical results for both the loading and maintenance dose administrations were compared to the device's accuracy during tests performed in the laboratory setting.Results: Twenty-two women were enrolled in this study. In both the clinical and laboratory settings, the mean flow rate errors for the loading and maintenance dose infusions were under 2%. During 466 h of testing, the device sounded 129 occlusion alarms across 14 subjects. Of these, 71 alarms were false positives.Conclusion: Results of this study support the use of AutoSyp as a less painful and accurate means of MgSO4 administration in clinical environments that lack infusion systems. There were a large number of false alarms in the current system which will be addressed in future designs. AutoSyp maintains the comfort of intravenous MgSO4 administration, but unlike commercially available syringe pumps, it is capable of operating with a variety of syringe brands and sizes and requires no additional consumables. AutoSyp's appropriate design will benefit its implementation and sustained use in low-resource settings.Trial Registration: Trial registered prospectively on November 18, 2014 with ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT02296931 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
48. Towards a point-of-care strip test to diagnose sickle cell anemia.
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Bond, Meaghan, Hunt, Brady, Flynn, Bailey, Huhtinen, Petri, Ware, Russell, and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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SICKLE cell anemia , *SICKLE cell anemia diagnosis , *GENOTYPES , *HEMOGLOBINS , *ANTIBODY formation , *PATIENTS - Abstract
A rapid test to identify patients with sickle cell disease could have important benefits in low-resource settings. Sickle cell anemia (SCA) affects about 300,000 newborns each year, the majority of whom are born in sub-Saharan Africa. Low-cost therapies are available to treat SCA, but most countries in sub-Saharan Africa lack robust neonatal screening programs needed to identify patients in need of treatment. To address this need, we developed and evaluated a competitive lateral flow assay that identifies patients with SCA (genotype HbSS) in 15 minutes using undiluted whole blood. A small volume of blood (0.5 μL– 3 μL) is mixed with antibody-coated blue latex beads in a tube and applied to the strip. Strips are then placed in a well of running buffer and allowed to run for 10 minutes. Laboratory evaluation with samples containing different proportions of hemoglobin A (HbA) and hemoglobin S (HbS) indicated that the test should enable identification of SCA patients but not persons with sickle cell trait (SCT). We evaluated the test using 41 samples from individuals with SCA, SCT, and normal blood. With visual inspection or quantitative analysis, we found a 98% accuracy when differentiating SCA from normal and SCT samples as a group (90% sensitivity and 100% specificity for identifying SCA). This work demonstrates important steps towards making a lateral flow test for hemoglobinopathies more appropriate for point-of-care use; further work is needed before the test is appropriate for clinical use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Diagnosing Postpartum Hemorrhage: A New Way to Assess Blood Loss in a Low-Resource Setting.
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Wilcox, Lorine, Ramprasad, Chethan, Gutierrez, Amanda, Oden, Maria, Richards-Kortum, Rebecca, Sangi-Haghpeykar, Haleh, and Gandhi, Manisha
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HEMORRHAGE diagnosis , *PUERPERAL disorders , *HOSPITALS , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *HISPANIC Americans , *MATERNAL mortality , *PHOTOGRAPHY , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *VAGINA , *WEIGHTS & measures , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *PILOT projects , *PRODUCT design , *EVALUATION research , *BLOOD loss estimation , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EQUIPMENT & supplies , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Introduction Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is the leading cause of maternal mortality worldwide. The largest barriers to treating PPH are symptom recognition and timely diagnosis. The SAPHE (Signaling a Postpartum Hemorrhage Emergency) Mat was constructed so that each square on the Mat absorbs up to 50 mL of blood. The objective of this study was to evaluate the correlation of visually estimated blood loss (EBL) using the SAPHE Mat with actual blood loss. Methods Thirty-six patients gave birth via vaginal delivery using the SAPHE Mat. Visual estimation of blood loss using the SAPHE Mat was calculated by multiplying the number of blood- saturated squares or partial squares by 50 mL. The visual EBL was compared with the actual blood loss calculated based on Mat weight before and after use (volume blood loss). Results Visual blood loss estimations were within 100 mL of the volume blood loss 69 % of the time and within 200 mL 97 % of the time. The mean difference between the visual EBL and volume blood loss (Mat weight change) was 80.91 mL. The Pearson correlation coefficient for visual EBL and volume blood loss was positive at 0.96 ( p < 0.001). Discussion The SAPHE Mat is able to provide a visual estimate of blood loss that is highly correlated with the actual blood loss on the mat. Future studies will assess the ability to deploy the SAPHE Mat in low-resource settings as a potential guide for estimating blood loss to assist in improved management of PPH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A paper-based immunoassay to determine HPV vaccination status at the point-of-care.
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Grant, Benjamin D., Smith, Chelsey A., Castle, Philip E., Scheurer, Michael E., and Richards-Kortum, Rebecca
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HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines , *PAPILLOMAVIRUS disease diagnosis , *IMMUNOASSAY , *POINT-of-care testing , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
Objective To develop and evaluate a paper-based point-of-care HPV serology test to determine if an individual has received two or more HPV immunizations. Methods The paper-based immunoassay was constructed using a nitrocellulose lateral flow strip with adsorbed HPV16 virus-like particles serving as the capturing moiety. Three capture zones containing virus-like particles were placed in series to allow for visual discrimination between high and low HPV16 plasma antibody concentrations. A plasma separation membrane was used to allow whole blood to be applied directly to the assay. All reagents were dried on glass fiber pads during device fabrication and were rehydrated with buffer at the time of use. A pilot study consisting of 35 subjects with a history of zero, one, two or three HPV vaccines was conducted to evaluate the immunoassay. The completed paper-based immunoassays were scanned for visual interpretation by three researchers who were blinded to the true results and separately evaluated quantitatively using MATLAB. Results For the 28 tests valid for analysis, fifteen subjects reported receiving two or more HPV vaccines, three reported receiving one, and ten reported having no HPV vaccinations. The paper-based immunoassays for all fifteen subjects who reported having received two or more HPV vaccines were judged positive by all researchers. Twelve of the thirteen tests from individuals reporting one or zero vaccinations were deemed negative by all observers. One test from an unvaccinated individual was judged positive by two out of three reviewers. Quantitatively, all tests were correctly separated between the two groups. Conclusions We successfully designed and tested a HPV serology test amenable to the point-of-care. The device showed promising results in a pilot study for discriminating between those who received two or more HPV vaccinations and those who did not. Furthermore, this device offers a platform for producing other semi-quantitative point-of-care serological tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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