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Implantable microchip containing oxygen-sensing paramagnetic crystals for long-term, repeated, and multisite in vivo oximetry.

Maciej M KmiecDan TseJesse M MastRizwan AhmadPeriannan Kuppusamy
Published in: Biomedical microdevices (2019)
EPR oximetry is established as a viable method for measuring the tissue oxygen level (partial pressure of oxygen, pO2) in animal models; however, it has not yet been established for measurements in humans. EPR oximetry requires an oxygen-sensing paramagnetic probe (molecular or particulate) to be placed at the site/organ of measurement, which may pose logistical and safety concerns, including invasiveness of the probe-placement procedure as well as lack of temporal stability and sensitivity for long-term (repeated) measurements, and possible toxicity in the short- and long-term. In the past, we have developed an implantable oxygen-sensing probe, called OxyChip, which we have successfully established for oximetry in pre-clinical animal models (Hou et al. Biomed. Microdevices 20, 29, 2018). Currently, OxyChip is being evaluated in a limited clinical trial in cancer patients. A major limitation of OxyChip is that it is a large (1.4 mm3) implant and hence not suitable for measuring oxygen heterogeneity that may be present in solid tumors, chronic wounds, etc. In this report, we describe the development of a substantially smaller version of OxyChip (0.07 mm3 or 70 cubic micron), called mChip, that can be placed in the tissue of interest using a 23G syringe-needle with minimal invasiveness. Using in vitro and in vivo models, we have shown that the microchip provides adequate EPR sensitivity, stability, and biocompatibility and thus enables robust, repeated, and simultaneous measurement from multiple implants providing mean and median pO2 values in the implanted region. The mChips will be particularly useful for those applications that require repeated measurements of mean/median pO2 in superficial tissues and malignancies.
Keyphrases
  • clinical trial
  • randomized controlled trial
  • single cell
  • study protocol
  • open label
  • phase ii