4.3 Article

A paperfluidic platform to detect Neisseria gonorrhoeae in clinical samples

Journal

BIOMEDICAL MICRODEVICES
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 1-7

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10544-018-0280-x

Keywords

Neisseria gonorrhoeae; point of care; molecular diagnostic; thermophilic helicase dependent amplification; isothermal amplification; internal amplification control; vaginal swab; urethral swab; paperfluidic

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R01 AI113927]
  2. NIH National Institute of Biomedical and Bioengineering [U54 EB007958]

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Globally, the microbe Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) causes 106 million newly documented sexually transmitted infections each year. Once appropriately diagnosed, NG infections can be readily treated with antibiotics, but high-risk patients often do not return to the clinic for treatment if results are not provided at the point of care. A rapid, sensitive molecular diagnostic would help increase NG treatment and reduce the prevalence of this sexually transmitted disease. Here, we report on the design and development of a rapid, highly sensitive, paperfluidic device for point-of-care diagnosis of NG. The device integrates patient swab sample lysis, nucleic acid extraction, thermophilic helicase-dependent amplification (tHDA), an internal amplification control (NGIC), and visual lateral flow detection within an 80 min run time. Limits of NG detection for the NG/NGIC multiplex tHDA assay were determined within the device, and clinical performance was validated retroactively against qPCR-quantified patient samples in a proof-of-concept study. This paperfluidic diagnostic has a clinically relevant limit of detection of 500 NG cells per device with analytical sensitivity down to 10 NG cells per device. In triplicate testing of 40 total urethral and vaginal swab samples, the device had 95% overall sensitivity and 100% specificity, approaching current laboratory-based molecular NG diagnostics. This diagnostic platform could increase access to accurate NG diagnoses to those most in need.

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