4.8 Article

Beyond liquid biopsy: Toward non-invasive assays for distanced cancer diagnostics in pandemics

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2021.113698

Keywords

Liquid biopsy; Biological fluids; Easy sampling; Distanced diagnostic devices; Lab-on-chips; Market readiness level

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Advances in liquid biopsy and lab-on-chip technologies have enabled reliable analysis and diagnosis from biological fluids, overcoming the limitations of standard clinical methods. Combining these technologies holds the potential to greatly assist in reducing exposure and transmission risks. The global pandemic has significantly impacted various aspects of life, limiting activities outside the home, including screenings, diagnoses, and disease follow-ups.
Liquid biopsy technologies have seen a significant improvement in the last decade, offering the possibility of reliable analysis and diagnosis from several biological fluids. The use of these technologies can overcome the limits of standard clinical methods, related to invasiveness and poor patient compliance. Along with this there are now mature examples of lab-on-chips (LOC) which are available and could be an emerging and breakthrough technology for the present and near-future clinical demands that provide sample treatment, reagent addition and analysis in a sample-in/answer-out approach. The possibility of combining non-invasive liquid biopsy and LOC technologies could greatly assist in the current need for minimizing exposure and transmission risks. The recent and ongoing pandemic outbreak of SARS-CoV-2, indeed, has heavily influenced all aspects of life worldwide. Ordinary tasks have been forced to switch from in presence to distanced, limiting the possibilities for a large number of activities in all fields of life outside of the home. Unfortunately, one of the settings in which physical distancing has assumed noteworthy consequences is the screening, diagnosis and follow-up of diseases. In this review, we analyse biological fluids that are easily collected without the intervention of specialized personnel and the possibility that they may be used-or not-for innovative diagnostic assays. We consider their advantages and limitations, mainly due to stability and storage and their integration into Point-of-Care diagnostics, demonstrating that technologies in some cases are mature enough to meet current clinical needs.

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