4.8 Review

Towards detection and diagnosis of Ebola virus disease at point-of-care

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 75, Issue -, Pages 254-272

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2015.08.040

Keywords

Ebola Virus diseases; Ebola therapeutics; Ebola diagnostics; Ebola sensor; Point-of-care sensing

Funding

  1. NIH [R01-DA027049, R21-MH 101025, R01-MH085259, R01-DA 034547]
  2. Div Of Industrial Innovation & Partnersh
  3. Directorate For Engineering [1237818] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Ebola outbreak-2014 (mainly Zaire strain related Ebola virus) has been declared most widely spread deadly persistent epidemic due to unavailability of rapid diagnostic, detection, and therapeutics. Ebola virus disease (EVD), a severe viral hemorrhagic fever syndrome caused by Ebola virus (EBOV) is transmitted by direct contact with the body fluids of infected person and objects contaminated with virus or infected animals. World Health Organization (WHO) has declared EVD epidemic as public health emergency of international concern with severe global economic burden. At fatal EBOV infection stage, patients usually die before the antibody response. Currently, rapid blood tests to diagnose EBOV infection include the antigen or antibodies capture using ELISA and RNA detection using RT/Q-PCR within 3-10 days after the onset of symptoms. Moreover, few nanotechnology-based calorimetric and paper-based immunoassay methods have been recently reported to detect Ebola virus. Unfortunately, these methods are limited to laboratory only. As state-of-the art (SoA) diagnostics time to confirm Ebola infection, varies from 6 h to about 3 days, it causes delay in therapeutic approaches. Thus developing a cost-effective, rapid, sensitive, and selective sensor to detect EVD at point-of-care (POC) is certainly worth exploring to establish rapid diagnostics to decide therapeutics. This review highlights SoA of Ebola diagnostics and also a call to develop rapid, selective and sensitive POC detection of EBOV for global health care. We propose that adopting miniaturized electrochemical EBOV immunosensing can detect virus level at pM concentration within similar to 40 min compared to 3 days of ELISA test at nM levels. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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