Triple Cascade Quantum-Strip for Heart Failure Point-of-Care Testing.
Xin LiuFengheng LiYong QiuZhuoru HuangXianyou SunYuxuan ZhuWeijie YuDeming JiangHao WanYuxiang PanPing WangPublished in: ACS sensors (2024)
Heart failure (HF) is a life-threatening syndrome. Timely and accurate bedside monitoring of the occurrence and progression of HF via measurements of multiple HF-related biomarkers remains a challenge. Here, we report a triple cascade quantum-strip (TCQS) sensing strategy for the rapid and selective multiplex-tracing of three clinically validated HF biomarkers (BNP/NT-proBNP/ST2) in serum. High selectivity to the three biomarkers is achieved by controlling the individual recognition ability of three target-specific quantum immunoprobes and tuning their simultaneous use to BNP/NT-proBNP/ST2 recognition without mutual interference, which allows the three biomarkers to be directly enriched from serum samples. Benefiting from the fast release-binding kinetics of target-bound immunoprobes on TCQS, recognizable fluorescent signals can be rapidly read out through combining with a self-designed smartphone-based portable reader. This rapid and simple profiling strategy results in good specificity and sensitivity with LODs of 0.097, 0.072, and 0.948 ng/mL for BNP, NT-proBNP, and ST2, respectively, which match the need of clinical applications. Real serum samples are tested with an accuracy of 92.86% for HF diagnosis, validating the capability of the smartphone-read TCQS for practical applications. In particular, the simultaneous detection of the TCQS sensing strategy for BNP/NT-proBNP/ST2 will facilitate the accurate monitoring of HF occurrence, risk stratification, progression, and prognosis as a powerful POCT tool.
Keyphrases
- acute heart failure
- heart failure
- molecular dynamics
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- risk assessment
- atrial fibrillation
- left ventricular
- real time pcr
- high throughput
- quantum dots
- energy transfer
- binding protein
- label free
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- case report
- transcription factor
- sensitive detection
- monte carlo
- drug induced
- low cost