Times Colonist

Simple device identifies diseases

Could a person get measles or rubella? MR Box gives fast assessment

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO

Canadian researcher­s have created a low-cost, portable device that can quickly test people to determine if they’re at risk for measles or rubella in parts of the world without access to standard laboratori­es, with the ultimate goal of preventing outbreaks of the deadly or disabling infectious diseases.

The MR Box, so called by its University of Toronto designers for measles and rubella, allows for on-the-spot assessment of a person’s vulnerabil­ity to these vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, which remain a major scourge in developing countries worldwide.

Each year, measles causes an estimated 134,000 deaths, and rubella leaves about 100,000 children with birth defects such as deafness.

At the heart of the shoeboxsiz­ed device is an inkjet-printed cartridge that uses the science of microfluid­ics to detect whether a child or adult has antibodies to measles or rubella in a pin-prick drop of their blood, indicating whether they have been exposed to either of the viruses through previous infection or vaccinatio­n.

A microfluid­ic device manipulate­s tiny amounts of fluid, such as blood, on a microchip to perform certain laboratory tests.

“In essence, this type of device can serve as a ‘lab-on-a-chip’ that recapitula­tes the functions of a modern chemical laboratory in a package that can fit in the palm of the hand,” said principal researcher Aaron Wheeler, a professor of bioanalyti­cal chemistry.

The test can process multiple blood samples at one time and produce results in 35 minutes, doing away with the need for collecting vials of blood that must be kept in cold-storage and transporte­d to an often-distant laboratory for testing — a process that is both costly and time-consuming.

Such rapid results would allow health authoritie­s to quickly determine the risk of measles or rubella outbreaks in a population, such as displaced persons in refugee camps or among those living in remote areas, as well as help evaluate the effectiven­ess of immunizati­on programs against those diseases.

The device is also inexpensiv­e, a boon for developing countries with often inadequate­ly funded healthcare systems, the authors suggest.

Darius Rackus, a postdoctor­al researcher in Wheeler’s group, said the cartridges cost about $6 each to produce, but by commercial­ly scaling up the manufactur­ing process, “hundreds of thousands of these devices” could be printed, potentiall­y one day bringing the cost down to “pennies each.”

The scientists, whose work is featured as the cover story in Wednesday’s issue of the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine, tested the MR Box in the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya in the spring of 2016.

Working with internatio­nal partners, including researcher­s at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, members of Wheeler’s lab travelled to Kenya, where they used the MR Box to test blood samples from 144 children and their caregivers in the refugee camp for the presence of antibodies to measles and rubella.

The team also collected standard blood samples from the participan­ts, which were sent for testing to Kenya’s national laboratory in Nairobi for comparison.

“The overall agreement with the reference test was 86 per cent for measles and 84 per cent for rubella,” said Julian Lamanna, a PhD candidate in Wheeler’s lab and a member of the team that travelled to Kenya.

“These results are really quite exciting considerin­g that this was the first time that we took our instrument and test outside of the lab,” Lamanna told a media teleconfer­ence, noting that the on-theground trial was extremely challengin­g, due to a small transforme­r fire, sporadic power outages and a batch of chemicals used in the MR Box testing that was spoiled.

“But through this field trial, we were able to translate our research to the real world,” he said.

 ??  ?? Canadian researcher­s have created a low-cost, portable device, shown in a handout photo, that can quickly test people to determine if they're at risk for measles or rubella in parts of the world without access to diagnostic laboratori­es.
Canadian researcher­s have created a low-cost, portable device, shown in a handout photo, that can quickly test people to determine if they're at risk for measles or rubella in parts of the world without access to diagnostic laboratori­es.

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