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Engineering of a miniaturized, robotic clinical laboratory

Authors :
Pradeep L. Ramachandran
Elizabeth A. Holmes
Chinmay Pangarkar
Karthik Jayasurya
Jared O'Leary
Chandan Shee
Alphonso Nguyen
Lucie S. Lee
Laura Hyland
Marilyn B. Nourse
Kevin D. Ha
Steven Chow
Samartha Anekal
Pradeep Bhatta
Steven F. Gessert
Ran Hu
Kate Engel
Renuka Shenoy
Yang Lily Liu
Bernardo Sosa-Padilla
Ushati Das
Amy Yuan
Jerald F. Sapida
Joy Roy
Peter Zhao
Lorraine Tran
Dariusz Wodziak
Amanda Trent
Daniel L. Young
Shekar Chandrasekaran
Amy R. Rappaport
Ken Quon
Andrew N. Kim
Yutao Chen
Timothy Michael Kemp
Arvind Jammalamadaka
Thomas C. Waggoner
Jocelyn A. Bailey
Channing R. Robertson
Xinwei Gong
Erez Galil
Nikolay V. Sergeev
Devayani Bhave
Sharada Sivaraman
Paul Patel
Source :
Bioengineering & Translational Medicine. 3:58-70
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

The ability to perform laboratory testing near the patient and with smaller blood volumes would benefit patients and physicians alike. We describe our design of a miniaturized clinical laboratory system with three components: a hardware platform (ie, the miniLab) that performs preanalytical and analytical processing steps using miniaturized sample manipulation and detection modules, an assay-configurable cartridge that provides consumable materials and assay reagents, and a server that communicates bidirectionally with the miniLab to manage assay-specific protocols and analyze, store, and report results (i.e., the virtual analyzer). The miniLab can detect analytes in blood using multiple methods, including molecular diagnostics, immunoassays, clinical chemistry, and hematology. Analytical performance results show that our qualitative Zika virus assay has a limit of detection of 55 genomic copies/ml. For our anti-herpes simplex virus type 2 immunoglobulin G, lipid panel, and lymphocyte subset panel assays, the miniLab has low imprecision, and method comparison results agree well with those from the United States Food and Drug Administration-cleared devices. With its small footprint and versatility, the miniLab has the potential to provide testing of a range of analytes in decentralized locations.

Details

ISSN :
23806761
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bioengineering & Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0daa82ddde3ee9b3c438d0de1df2fdb1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10084