Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7231444 | Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2015 | 39 Pages |
Abstract
Nucleic acid testing (NAT), as a molecular diagnostic technique, including nucleic acid extraction, amplification and detection, plays a fundamental role in medical diagnosis for timely medical treatment. However, current NAT technologies require relatively high-end instrumentation, skilled personnel, and are time-consuming. These drawbacks mean conventional NAT becomes impractical in many resource-limited disease-endemic settings, leading to an urgent need to develop a fast and portable NAT diagnostic tool. Paper-based devices are typically robust, cost-effective and user-friendly, holding a great potential for NAT at the point of care. In view of the escalating demand for the low cost diagnostic devices, we highlight the beneficial use of paper as a platform for NAT, the current state of its development, and the existing challenges preventing its widespread use. We suggest a strategy involving integrating all three steps of NAT into one single paper-based sample-to-answer diagnostic device for rapid medical diagnostics in the near future.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Jane Ru Choi, Ruihua Tang, ShuQi Wang, Wan Abu Bakar Wan Abas, Belinda Pingguan-Murphy, Feng Xu,