4.8 Article

Wearable electrochemical biosensors in North America

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2020.112750

Keywords

Wearable biosensors; Flexible electronics; Electrochemistry; Personalized medicine; COVID-19; Telemedicine

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5R21NR018271]
  2. Translational Research Institute for Space Health through NASA [NNX16AO69A]
  3. NASA Cooperative Agreement [80NSSC20M0167]
  4. Center of Wearable Sensors at University of California San Diego (UCSD)

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This article discusses the global research and commercialization efforts in the development of wearable electrochemical biosensors, with a focus on the innovative developments in North America. These sensors are used for disease prognosis, diagnosis, management, and fitness monitoring applications.
Tremendous research and commercialization efforts around the world are focused on developing novel wearable electrochemical biosensors that can noninvasively and continuously screen for biochemical markers in body fluids for the prognosis, diagnosis and management of diseases, as well as the monitoring of fitness. Researchers in North America are leading the development of innovative wearable platforms that can comfortably comply to the human body and efficiently sample fluids such as sweat, interstitial fluids, tear and saliva for the electrochemical detection of biomarkers through various sensing approaches such as potentiometric ion selective electrodes and amperometric enzymatic sensors. We start this review with a historical timeline overviewing the major milestones in the development of wearable electrochemical sensors by North American institutions. We then describe how such research efforts have led to pioneering developments and are driving the advancement and commercialization of wearable electrochemical sensors: from minimally invasive continuous glucose monitors for chronic disease management to non-invasive sweat electrolyte sensors for dehydration monitoring in fitness applications. While many countries across the globe have contributed significantly to this rapidly emerging field, their contributions are beyond the scope of this review. Furthermore, we share our perspective on the promising future of wearable electrochemical sensors in applications spanning from remote and personalized healthcare to wellness.

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