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Under-oil open microfluidic systems for rapid phenotypic antimicrobial susceptibility testing

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Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) is crucial for effective antimicrobial selection and optimization in patients. Microfluidics-based phenotypic AST, such as the under-oil open microfluidic systems (UOMS) described in this pilot study, offers a rapid and accurate approach for testing antimicrobial activities. UOMS-AST provides open access and optical resolution, and can determine susceptibility/resistance breakpoint and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) quickly. By combining UOMS-AST with cloud lab data analytics, a fast sample-to-report turnaround time of less than 4 hours can be achieved, making it a versatile platform for phenotypic AST in hospital/clinic settings.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) remains the cornerstone of effective antimicrobial selection and optimization in patients. Despite recent advances in rapid pathogen identification and resistance marker detection with molecular diagnostics (e.g., qPCR, MALDI-TOF MS), phenotypic (i.e., microbial culture-based) AST methods - the gold standard in hospitals/clinics - remain relatively unchanged over the last few decades. Microfluidics-based phenotypic AST has been growing fast in recent years, aiming for rapid (i.e., turnaround time <8 h), high-throughput, and automated species identification, resistance detection, and antibiotics screening. In this pilot study, we describe the application of a multi-liquid-phase open microfluidic system, named under-oil open microfluidic systems (UOMS), to achieve a rapid phenotypic AST. UOMS provides an open microfluidics-based solution for rapid phenotypic AST (UOMS-AST) by implementing and recording a pathogen's antimicrobial activity in micro-volume testing units under an oil overlay. UOMS-AST allows free physical access (e.g., by standard pipetting) to the system and label-free, single-cell resolution optical access. UOMS-AST can accurately and rapidly determine antimicrobial activities [including susceptibility/resistance breakpoint and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)] from nominal sample/bacterial cells in a system aligned with clinical laboratory standards where open systems and optical microscopy are predominantly adopted. Further, we combine UOMS-AST with a cloud lab data analytic technique for real-time image analysis and report generation to provide a rapid (<4 h) sample-to-report turnaround time, shedding light on its utility as a versatile (e.g., low-resource setting and manual laboratory operation, or high-throughput automated system) phenotypic AST platform for hospital/clinic use.

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