4.8 Article

A culture-free biphasic approach for sensitive and rapid detection of pathogens in dried whole-blood matrix

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2209607119

Keywords

blood stream infection (BSI); sepsis diagnosis; biphasic; porous dried blood matrix; isothermal amplification

Funding

  1. University of Illinois
  2. CIMIT: NIH SUB MGH grant [226421]
  3. NIGMS [1R01GM129709]
  4. NIH [1 R21 AI146865A]
  5. Jump Applied Research through Community Health through Engineering and Simulation (ARCHES) endowment through the Health Care Engineering Systems Center at the UIUC
  6. Dynamic Research Enterprise for Multidisciplinary Engineering Sciences (DREMES) at Zhejiang University
  7. UIUC - Zhejiang University
  8. Purdue University
  9. Agricultural Research Service of the United States Department of Agriculture [8000074077]

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In this study, we introduce a new approach to blood-based diagnostics that allows for rapid drying of large blood volumes and access to target nucleic acid through physical networks. We demonstrate single-molecule sensitivity and detect a broad spectrum of pathogens using loop-mediated isothermal amplification. Validation with clinical samples shows high sensitivity and specificity, along with a significant reduction in sample-to-result time.
Blood stream infections (BSIs) cause high mortality, and their rapid detection remains a significant diagnostic challenge. Timely and informed administration of antibiotics can significantly improve patient outcomes. However, blood culture, which takes up to 5 d for a negative result, followed by PCR remains the gold standard in diagnosing BSI. Here, we introduce a new approach to blood-based diagnostics where large blood volumes can be rapidly dried, resulting in inactivation of the inhibitory components in blood. Further thermal treatments then generate a physical microscale and nanoscale fluidic network inside the dried matrix to allow access to target nucleic acid. The amplification enzymes and primers initiate the reaction within the dried blood matrix through these networks, precluding any need for conventional nucleic acid purification. High heme background is confined to the solid phase, while amplicons are enriched in the clear supernatant (liquid phase), giving fluorescence change comparable to purified DNA reactions. We demonstrate single-molecule sensitivity using a loop-mediated isothermal amplification reaction in our platform and detect a broad spectrum of pathogens, including gram-positive methicillin-resistant and methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, gram-negative Escherichia coli bacteria, and Candida albicans (fungus) from whole blood with a limit of detection (LOD) of 1.2 colony-forming units (CFU)/mL from 0.8 to 1 mL of starting blood volume. We validated our assay using 63 clinical samples (100% sensitivity and specificity) and significantly reduced sample-to-result time from over 20 h to <2.5 h. The reduction in instrumentation complexity and costs compared to blood culture and alternate molecular diagnostic platforms can have broad applications in healthcare systems in developed world and resource-limited settings.

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