Scientists develop a quick, cheap and portable test for diagnosing TB
A microchip-based test developed by A*STAR researchers can diagnose tuberculosis in 15 minutes. The test meets the speed, cost, accessibility and disposal standards recommended by the World Health Organization for detecting the deadly disease.
Tuberculosis is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. In 2015, the disease killed almost 2 million
people, and infected more than 10 million, of which about 35 to
40 per cent went undiagnosed—a dangerous scenario given
its contagious nature, spreading when people with active forms
of the disease cough or sneeze into the air.
The most
common diagnostic test used in the developing world is 100 years
old, and involves looking at sputum samples under a microscope.
It only detects up to 60 per cent of positive cases (a measure
of sensitivity), and cannot confirm negative cases
(specificity).
Alternative tests require very
expensive equipment and skilled technicians, or take too long.
"In the developing world, the current gold-standard
point-of-care test is still sputum microscopy," says Amit
Singhal, who led the study at the A*STAR Singapore Immunology
Network.
In recent years, several point-of-care tests
have entered the market. These detect infection based on whether
patients have developed antibodies against proteins secreted by
the pathogen. They are cheap, quick and simple, but no more
effective than the sputum method. Singhal wanted to improve the
sensitivity and specificity of these techniques by instead
looking for antibodies against lipids found on the surface of
the tuberculosis bacteria.
His team sprinkled the
bacterial lipids on magnetic beads and anchored the beads to one
end of a microchip with six chambers for processing blood
samples. Any antibodies present in the blood would latch on to
the lipids and could then be tagged with a color-changing
molecule. The lipid test offered much better results than the
protein test, or any lipid–protein combinations. Assessing
146 samples, including 41 healthy controls, it detected 72 per
cent of active tuberculosis cases, increasing to 90 per cent
when combined with the sputum test—all within 15
minutes.
Singhal estimates that the microchips could
be mass-produced for less than US$10, and their small size makes
them easy to dispose of underground. He plans to further
automate the device to light up with a color that can be
measured using a smartphone. Singhal also wants to boost the
test's sensitivity, and find ways of detecting tuberculosis at a
latent stage, before it becomes contagious.
"One-third
of the world has latent tuberculosis infection, of which 5 to 10
per cent develop active tuberculosis," says Singhal. "The plan
is to identify those people very early in the infection
process."
Reference
Vigneshwaran Mani et al. Microchip-based ultrafast serodiagnostic assay for tuberculosis, Scientific Reports (2016). DOI: 10.1038/srep35845
Source:
Medical Xpress