Kan-Zhi Liu, Ganghong Tian, Alex C.-T. Ko, Matthias Geissler, Lidija Malic, Byeong-Ui Moon, Liviu Clime and Teodor Veres
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引用次数: 0
摘要
急性呼吸道感染(ARTIs)是由病毒或细菌病原体的零星或大流行爆发引起的,对发展中国家和工业化国家都是一个相当大的社会经济负担。作为疾病管理、流行病学跟踪和公共卫生干预的基石,诊断方法和技术正在不断发展,以满足对更高灵敏度、特异性和分析通量的需求。微流控技术正成为这些发展中的一项关键技术,因为它能以前所未有的规模实现生物分析测试的集成化、微型化和自动化,减少样品和试剂消耗,并在灵敏度、通量和响应时间方面提高诊断性能。在本文中,我们将介绍相关的急性呼吸道感染病--肺炎、流感、严重急性呼吸系统综合征和 2019 年冠状病毒病--及其发病机制。我们概述了疾病诊断的既定方法,包括核酸扩增技术、抗原检测、血清学检测以及微生物培养。随后,我们将简要介绍微流控技术,以及如何利用离心、气动泵、电润湿、毛细管作用和多孔介质中的吸附传播来控制小体积和小规模的流动,因为这些原理都会以特定的方式影响诊断工具的设计、功能和性能。我们简要介绍了在实验室和护理点环境中使用微流控技术的商用仪器。文章的主要部分专门介绍了利用微型微流控系统进行 ARTI 诊断的新兴方法。最后,我们分享了对未来前景的看法,以及与基于微流控系统的验证、批准和适应性相关的挑战。
Microfluidic methods for the diagnosis of acute respiratory tract infections
Acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs) are caused by sporadic or pandemic outbreaks of viral or bacterial pathogens, and continue to be a considerable socioeconomic burden for both developing and industrialized countries alike. Diagnostic methods and technologies serving as the cornerstone for disease management, epidemiological tracking, and public health interventions are evolving continuously to keep up with the demand for higher sensitivity, specificity and analytical throughput. Microfluidics is becoming a key technology in these developments as it allows for integrating, miniaturizing and automating bioanalytical assays at an unprecedented scale, reducing sample and reagent consumption and improving diagnostic performance in terms of sensitivity, throughput and response time. In this article, we describe relevant ARTIs—pneumonia, influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and coronavirus disease 2019—along with their pathogenesis. We provide a summary of established methods for disease diagnosis, involving nucleic acid amplification techniques, antigen detection, serological testing as well as microbial culture. This is followed by a short introduction to microfluidics and how flow is governed at low volume and reduced scale using centrifugation, pneumatic pumping, electrowetting, capillary action, and propagation in porous media through wicking, for each of these principles impacts the design, functioning and performance of diagnostic tools in a particular way. We briefly cover commercial instruments that employ microfluidics for use in both laboratory and point-of-care settings. The main part of the article is dedicated to emerging methods deriving from the use of miniaturized, microfluidic systems for ARTI diagnosis. Finally, we share our thoughts on future perspectives and the challenges associated with validation, approval, and adaptation of microfluidic-based systems.