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A strategy for low-cost portable monitoring of plasma drug concentrations using a sustainable boron-doped-diamond chip

On-site monitoring of plasma drug concentrations is required for effective therapies. Recently developed handy biosensors are not yet popular owing to insufficient evaluation of accuracy on clinical samples and the necessity of complicated costly fabrication processes. Here, we approached these bott...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Saiki, Takuro, Ogata, Genki, Sawamura, Seishiro, Asai, Kai, Razvina, Olga, Watanabe, Kota, Kato, Rito, Zhang, Qi, Akiyama, Koei, Madhurantakam, Sasya, Ahmad, Norzahirah Binti, Ino, Daisuke, Nashimoto, Haruma, Matsumoto, Yoshifumi, Moriyama, Masato, Horii, Arata, Kondo, Chie, Ochiai, Ryosuke, Kusuhara, Hiroyuki, Saijo, Yasuo, Einaga, Yasuaki, Hibino, Hiroshi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10205593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37234605
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15963
Descripción
Sumario:On-site monitoring of plasma drug concentrations is required for effective therapies. Recently developed handy biosensors are not yet popular owing to insufficient evaluation of accuracy on clinical samples and the necessity of complicated costly fabrication processes. Here, we approached these bottlenecks via a strategy involving engineeringly unmodified boron-doped diamond (BDD), a sustainable electrochemical material. A sensing system based on a ∼1 cm(2) BDD chip, when analysing rat plasma spiked with a molecular-targeting anticancer drug, pazopanib, detected clinically relevant concentrations. The response was stable in 60 sequential measurements on the same chip. In a clinical study, data obtained with a BDD chip were consistent with liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry results. Finally, the portable system with a palm-sized sensor containing the chip analysed ∼40 μL of whole blood from dosed rats within ∼10 min. This approach with the ‘reusable’ sensor may improve point-of-monitoring systems and personalised medicine while reducing medical costs.