TY - JOUR
T1 - Microfluidic thread-based analytical devices for point-of-care detection of therapeutic antibody in blood
AU - Shimazu, Riho
AU - Tomimuro, Kosuke
AU - Ni, Yan
AU - Malegori, Cristina
AU - Hamedpour, Vahid
AU - Hiruta, Yuki
AU - Oliveri, Paolo
AU - Merkx, Maarten
AU - Citterio, Daniel
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge financial support by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) (grant no. 18H02008 ) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS, Japan) to D.C. and Y.H., Terumo Life Science Foundation grant (Japan) to D.C., as well as by an European Research Council (ERC) proof-of-concept grant ( ERC- 2016-PoC 755471 ), an NWO-Take-off-1 grant ( NWO , 17820 ) from the Dutch Research Council (NWO, The Netherlands), and a Regieorgaan SIA (The Netherlands) grant RAAK.PRO Printing makes sense ( RAAK.PRO02.066 ) to M.M.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/2/1
Y1 - 2022/2/1
N2 - In therapies involving therapeutic antibodies, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) has the potential to substantially increase clinical efficacy and to enable more economical drug use, because the clearance from the bloodstream after administration is patient dependent. Since TDM must be performed continuously and over extended time periods, it should ideally be achieved through an economical and easy to perform point-of-care (POC) assay. Here, we introduce a new analytical method for POC TDM of the clinically important therapeutic antibody cetuximab, using microfluidic thread-based analytical devices (µTADs) as a platform for a bioluminescence resonance energy-transfer (BRET) switching sensor protein for simple quantitative antibody detection. The µTAD is pre-treated with NaCl for blood plasma separation and a BRET switching sensor protein and its substrate for cetuximab detection, integrating all elements required for a reagent-free, single-step assay. A change in bioluminescence emission color depending on cetuximab concentrations occurs after whole blood application. The device design enables the quantification of cetuximab within the therapeutically relevant blood concentration range in 2.5 min using only 2 µL of whole blood. The results obtained are independent of the blood volume. This µTAD can be stored for about one month at − 20 °C, a temperature compatible with commonly available freezers. The application of mathematical morphology recognition (MMR)-integrated image processing techniques for the automatic selection of regions of interest (ROIs) yields results with minimal error. The simplicity of use, rapidity, and cost-effectiveness of this µTAD are expected to offer the possibility of achieving TDM of therapeutic antibodies at POC for individual patients.
AB - In therapies involving therapeutic antibodies, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) has the potential to substantially increase clinical efficacy and to enable more economical drug use, because the clearance from the bloodstream after administration is patient dependent. Since TDM must be performed continuously and over extended time periods, it should ideally be achieved through an economical and easy to perform point-of-care (POC) assay. Here, we introduce a new analytical method for POC TDM of the clinically important therapeutic antibody cetuximab, using microfluidic thread-based analytical devices (µTADs) as a platform for a bioluminescence resonance energy-transfer (BRET) switching sensor protein for simple quantitative antibody detection. The µTAD is pre-treated with NaCl for blood plasma separation and a BRET switching sensor protein and its substrate for cetuximab detection, integrating all elements required for a reagent-free, single-step assay. A change in bioluminescence emission color depending on cetuximab concentrations occurs after whole blood application. The device design enables the quantification of cetuximab within the therapeutically relevant blood concentration range in 2.5 min using only 2 µL of whole blood. The results obtained are independent of the blood volume. This µTAD can be stored for about one month at − 20 °C, a temperature compatible with commonly available freezers. The application of mathematical morphology recognition (MMR)-integrated image processing techniques for the automatic selection of regions of interest (ROIs) yields results with minimal error. The simplicity of use, rapidity, and cost-effectiveness of this µTAD are expected to offer the possibility of achieving TDM of therapeutic antibodies at POC for individual patients.
KW - Bioluminescence
KW - Cetuximab
KW - Mathematical morphology recognition
KW - Microfluidic device
KW - Therapeutic drug monitoring
KW - Whole blood
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U2 - 10.1016/j.snb.2021.131002
DO - 10.1016/j.snb.2021.131002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85119078929
SN - 0925-4005
VL - 352
JO - Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical
JF - Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical
M1 - 131002
ER -