Rapid diagnostic testing platform for iron and vitamin A deficiency. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Micronutrient deficiencies such as those of vitamin A and iron affect a third of the world's population with consequences such as night blindness, higher child mortality, anemia, poor pregnancy outcomes, and reduced work capacity. Many efforts to prevent or treat these deficiencies are hampered by the lack of adequate, accessible, and affordable diagnostic methods that can enable better targeting of interventions. In this work, we demonstrate a rapid diagnostic test and mobile enabled platform for simultaneously quantifying iron (ferritin), vitamin A (retinol-binding protein), and inflammation (C-reactive protein) status. Our approach, enabled by combining multiple florescent markers and immunoassay approaches on a single test, allows us to provide accurate quantification in 15 min even though the physiological range of the markers of interest varies over five orders of magnitude. We report sensitivities of 88%, 100%, and 80% and specificities of 97%, 100%, and 97% for iron deficiency (ferritin <15 ng/mL or 32 pmol/L), vitamin A deficiency (retinol-binding protein <14.7 μg/mL or 0.70 μmol/L) and inflammation status (C-reactive protein >3.0 μg/mL or 120 nmol/L), respectively. This technology is suitable for point-of-care use in both resource-rich and resource-limited settings and can be read either by a standard laptop computer or through our previously developed NutriPhone technology. If implemented as either a population-level screening or clinical diagnostic tool, we believe this platform can transform nutritional status assessment and monitoring globally.

publication date

  • December 4, 2017

Research

keywords

  • Anemia, Iron-Deficiency
  • Molecular Diagnostic Techniques
  • Point-of-Care Testing
  • Vitamin A Deficiency

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC5754775

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85038857797

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1073/pnas.1711464114

PubMed ID

  • 29203653

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 114

issue

  • 51