Clinical Trial: Magnetoplasmonic ELISA for Urine-based Active Tuberculosis Detection and Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy Monitoring.
Jeonghyo KimVan Tan TranSangjin OhMinji JangDong Kun LeeJong Chul HongTae Jung ParkHwa-Jung KimJaebeom LeePublished in: ACS central science (2021)
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has proved the importance of fast and widespread diagnostic testing to prevent serious epidemics timely. The first-line weapon against rapidly transmitted disease is a quick and massive screening test to isolate patients immediately, preventing dissemination. Here, we described magnetoplasmonic nanozymes (MagPlas NZs), i.e., hierarchically coassembled Fe3O4-Au superparticles, that are capable of integrating magnetic enrichment and catalytic amplification, thereby the assay can be streamlined amenable to high-throughput operation and achieve ultrahigh sensitivity. Combining this advantage with conventional enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), we propose a MagPlas ELISA for urine-based tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and anti-TB therapy monitoring, which enables fast (<3 h), and highly sensitive (up to pM with naked-eyes, < 10 fM with plate reader) urinary TB antigen detection. A clinical study with a total of 297 urine samples showed robust sensitivity for pulmonary tuberculosis (85.0%) and extra-pulmonary tuberculosis (52.8%) patients with high specificity (96.7% and 96.9%). Furthermore, this methodology offers a great promise of noninvasive therapeutic response monitoring, which is impracticable in the gold-standard culture method. The MagPlas ELISA showed high sensitivity comparable to the PCR assay while retaining a simple and cheap ELISA concept, thus it could be a promising point-of-care test for TB epidemic control and possibly applied to other acute infections.
Keyphrases
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- high throughput
- coronavirus disease
- clinical trial
- monoclonal antibody
- end stage renal disease
- label free
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- air pollution
- newly diagnosed
- liver failure
- single cell
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- prognostic factors
- molecularly imprinted
- double blind
- optical coherence tomography
- peritoneal dialysis
- emergency department
- mass spectrometry
- stem cells
- respiratory failure
- deep learning
- big data
- phase ii
- smoking cessation
- sensitive detection
- silver nanoparticles
- artificial intelligence
- quantum dots
- bone marrow