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Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test

Monitoring for drug-induced liver injury (DILI) via serial transaminase measurements in patients on potentially hepatotoxic medications (e.g., for HIV and tuberculosis) is routine in resource-rich nations, but often unavailable in resource-limited settings. Towards enabling universal access to affor...

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Autores principales: Pollock, Nira R., McGray, Sarah, Colby, Donn J., Noubary, Farzad, Nguyen, Huyen, Nguyen, The Anh, Khormaee, Sariah, Jain, Sidhartha, Hawkins, Kenneth, Kumar, Shailendra, Rolland, Jason P., Beattie, Patrick D., Chau, Nguyen V., Quang, Vo M., Barfield, Cori, Tietje, Kathy, Steele, Matt, Weigl, Bernhard H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3787037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075616
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author Pollock, Nira R.
McGray, Sarah
Colby, Donn J.
Noubary, Farzad
Nguyen, Huyen
Nguyen, The Anh
Khormaee, Sariah
Jain, Sidhartha
Hawkins, Kenneth
Kumar, Shailendra
Rolland, Jason P.
Beattie, Patrick D.
Chau, Nguyen V.
Quang, Vo M.
Barfield, Cori
Tietje, Kathy
Steele, Matt
Weigl, Bernhard H.
author_facet Pollock, Nira R.
McGray, Sarah
Colby, Donn J.
Noubary, Farzad
Nguyen, Huyen
Nguyen, The Anh
Khormaee, Sariah
Jain, Sidhartha
Hawkins, Kenneth
Kumar, Shailendra
Rolland, Jason P.
Beattie, Patrick D.
Chau, Nguyen V.
Quang, Vo M.
Barfield, Cori
Tietje, Kathy
Steele, Matt
Weigl, Bernhard H.
author_sort Pollock, Nira R.
collection PubMed
description Monitoring for drug-induced liver injury (DILI) via serial transaminase measurements in patients on potentially hepatotoxic medications (e.g., for HIV and tuberculosis) is routine in resource-rich nations, but often unavailable in resource-limited settings. Towards enabling universal access to affordable point-of-care (POC) screening for DILI, we have performed the first field evaluation of a paper-based, microfluidic fingerstick test for rapid, semi-quantitative, visual measurement of blood alanine aminotransferase (ALT). Our objectives were to assess operational feasibility, inter-operator variability, lot variability, device failure rate, and accuracy, to inform device modification for further field testing. The paper-based ALT test was performed at POC on fingerstick samples from 600 outpatients receiving HIV treatment in Vietnam. Results, read independently by two clinic nurses, were compared with gold-standard automated (Roche Cobas) results from venipuncture samples obtained in parallel. Two device lots were used sequentially. We demonstrated high inter-operator agreement, with 96.3% (95% C.I., 94.3–97.7%) agreement in placing visual results into clinically-defined “bins” (<3x, 3–5x, and >5x upper limit of normal), >90% agreement in validity determination, and intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.89 (95% C.I., 0.87–0.91). Lot variability was observed in % invalids due to hemolysis (21.1% for Lot 1, 1.6% for Lot 2) and correlated with lots of incorporated plasma separation membranes. Invalid rates <1% were observed for all other device controls. Overall bin placement accuracy for the two readers was 84% (84.3%/83.6%). Our findings of extremely high inter-operator agreement for visual reading–obtained in a target clinical environment, as performed by local practitioners–indicate that the device operation and reading process is feasible and reproducible. Bin placement accuracy and lot-to-lot variability data identified specific targets for device optimization and material quality control. This is the first field study performed with a patterned paper-based microfluidic device and opens the door to development of similar assays for other important analytes.
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spelling pubmed-37870372013-10-04 Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test Pollock, Nira R. McGray, Sarah Colby, Donn J. Noubary, Farzad Nguyen, Huyen Nguyen, The Anh Khormaee, Sariah Jain, Sidhartha Hawkins, Kenneth Kumar, Shailendra Rolland, Jason P. Beattie, Patrick D. Chau, Nguyen V. Quang, Vo M. Barfield, Cori Tietje, Kathy Steele, Matt Weigl, Bernhard H. PLoS One Research Article Monitoring for drug-induced liver injury (DILI) via serial transaminase measurements in patients on potentially hepatotoxic medications (e.g., for HIV and tuberculosis) is routine in resource-rich nations, but often unavailable in resource-limited settings. Towards enabling universal access to affordable point-of-care (POC) screening for DILI, we have performed the first field evaluation of a paper-based, microfluidic fingerstick test for rapid, semi-quantitative, visual measurement of blood alanine aminotransferase (ALT). Our objectives were to assess operational feasibility, inter-operator variability, lot variability, device failure rate, and accuracy, to inform device modification for further field testing. The paper-based ALT test was performed at POC on fingerstick samples from 600 outpatients receiving HIV treatment in Vietnam. Results, read independently by two clinic nurses, were compared with gold-standard automated (Roche Cobas) results from venipuncture samples obtained in parallel. Two device lots were used sequentially. We demonstrated high inter-operator agreement, with 96.3% (95% C.I., 94.3–97.7%) agreement in placing visual results into clinically-defined “bins” (<3x, 3–5x, and >5x upper limit of normal), >90% agreement in validity determination, and intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.89 (95% C.I., 0.87–0.91). Lot variability was observed in % invalids due to hemolysis (21.1% for Lot 1, 1.6% for Lot 2) and correlated with lots of incorporated plasma separation membranes. Invalid rates <1% were observed for all other device controls. Overall bin placement accuracy for the two readers was 84% (84.3%/83.6%). Our findings of extremely high inter-operator agreement for visual reading–obtained in a target clinical environment, as performed by local practitioners–indicate that the device operation and reading process is feasible and reproducible. Bin placement accuracy and lot-to-lot variability data identified specific targets for device optimization and material quality control. This is the first field study performed with a patterned paper-based microfluidic device and opens the door to development of similar assays for other important analytes. Public Library of Science 2013-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3787037/ /pubmed/24098705 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075616 Text en © 2013 Pollock et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pollock, Nira R.
McGray, Sarah
Colby, Donn J.
Noubary, Farzad
Nguyen, Huyen
Nguyen, The Anh
Khormaee, Sariah
Jain, Sidhartha
Hawkins, Kenneth
Kumar, Shailendra
Rolland, Jason P.
Beattie, Patrick D.
Chau, Nguyen V.
Quang, Vo M.
Barfield, Cori
Tietje, Kathy
Steele, Matt
Weigl, Bernhard H.
Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title_full Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title_fullStr Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title_full_unstemmed Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title_short Field Evaluation of a Prototype Paper-Based Point-of-Care Fingerstick Transaminase Test
title_sort field evaluation of a prototype paper-based point-of-care fingerstick transaminase test
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3787037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24098705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075616
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