Each day, approximately 830 women and 7,400 newborns die from complications during pregnancy and childbirth. Improving maternal and neonatal health will require bringing rapid diagnosis and treatment to the point of care in low-resource settings. However, to date there are few diagnostic tools available that can be used at the point of care to detect the leading causes of maternal and neonatal mortality in low-resource settings. Here we review both commercially available diagnostics and technologies that are currently in development to detect the leading causes of maternal and neonatal mortality, highlighting key gaps in development where innovative design could increase access to technology and enable rapid diagnosis at the bedside.
Sickle cell disease
(SCD) is a group of common, life-threatening
disorders caused by a point mutation in the β globin gene. Early
diagnosis through newborn and early childhood screening, parental
education, and preventive treatments are known to reduce mortality.
However, the cost and complexity of conventional diagnostic methods
limit the feasibility of early diagnosis for SCD in resource-limited
areas worldwide. Although several point-of-care tests are commercially
available, most are antibody-based tests, which cannot be used in
patients who have recently received a blood transfusion. Here, we
describe the development of a rapid, low-cost nucleic acid test that
uses real-time fluorescence to detect the point mutation encoding
hemoglobin S (HbS) in one round of isothermal recombinase polymerase
amplification (RPA). When tested with a set of clinical samples from
SCD patients and healthy volunteers, our assay demonstrated 100% sensitivity
for both the β
A
globin and β
S
globin
alleles and 94.7 and 97.1% specificities for the β
A
globin allele and β
S
globin allele, respectively
(
n
= 91). Finally, we demonstrate proof-of-concept
sample-to-answer genotyping of genomic DNA from capillary blood using
an alkaline lysis procedure and direct input of diluted lysate into
RPA. The workflow is performed in <30 min at a cost of <$5 USD
on a commercially available benchtop fluorimeter and an open-source
miniature fluorimeter. This study demonstrates the potential utility
of a rapid, sample-to-answer nucleic acid test for SCD that may be
implemented near the point of care and could be adapted to other disease-causing
point mutations in genomic DNA.
The global COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for rapid, accurate and accessible nucleic acid tests to enable timely identification of infected individuals. We optimized a sample-to-answer nucleic acid test for SARS-CoV-2 that provides results in <1 hour using inexpensive and readily available reagents. The test workflow includes a simple lysis and viral inactivation protocol followed by direct isothermal amplification of viral RNA using RT-LAMP. The assay was validated using two different instruments, a portable isothermal fluorimeter and a standard thermocycler. Results of the RT-LAMP assay were compared to traditional RT-qPCR for nasopharyngeal swabs, nasal swabs, and saliva collected from a cohort of patients hospitalized due to COVID-19. For all three sample types, positive agreement with RT-LAMP performed using the isothermal fluorimeter was 100% for samples with Ct <30 and 69–91% for samples with Ct <40. Following validation, the test was successfully scaled to test the saliva of up to 400 asymptomatic individuals per day as part of the campus surveillance program at Rice University. Successful development, validation, and scaling of this sample-to-answer, extraction-free real-time RT-LAMP test for SARS-CoV-2 adds a highly adaptable tool to efforts to control the COVID-19 pandemic, and can inform test development strategies for future infectious disease threats.
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