Microchip Invented for Faster, Simpler Type-1 Diabetes Diagnosis, Risk Assessment, and Biomarker Discovery
|
By LabMedica International staff writers Posted on 23 Jul 2014 |

Image: The inexpensive type-1 diabetes microchip test relies on fluorescence-based antibody detection. The innovation is that the glass plates forming the base of each microchip are coated with an array of nanoparticle-sized islands of gold, which intensify the fluorescent signal, enabling reliable antibody detection (Photo courtesy of Prof. Brian Feldman, Stanford University, and Nature Medicine).
Researchers have succeeded in developing a low-cost, portable, nanotech microchip-based test for diagnosing type-1 diabetes that would speed diagnosis and screening, and enable new approaches to studying how the disease develops.
The type-1 diabetes (T1D) microchip test was invented by a Stanford University (Stanford, CA, USA) team led by Stanford University School of Medicine's Brian Feldman, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pediatric endocrinology, the Bechtel Endowed Faculty Scholar in Pediatric Translational Medicine, and pediatric endocrinologist at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. It distinguishes between the two main forms of diabetes mellitus – T1D, being an autoimmune disease, has auto-antibodies not present with type-2 diabetes (T2D). Until now, making the distinction has required a slow, expensive test available only in sophisticated health-care settings. The new handheld, inexpensive test can be performed outside hospital settings and could improve patient care worldwide; including satisfying a global need in many parts of the world where the old test is prohibitively expensive and difficult to perform. The researchers are seeking US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the device.
The old, slow test detects the auto-antibodies using radioactive materials, takes several days, can only be performed by highly-trained lab staff, and costs several hundred dollars per patient. In contrast, the new, relatively low-cost microchip method uses no radioactivity, produces results in minutes, and requires minimal training to perform. And each chip, expected to cost about USD 20 to produce, can be used for upward of 15 tests. The microchip also uses a much smaller volume of blood than the older test: instead of a lab-based blood draw it can be done with blood from a finger prick.
“With the new test, not only do we anticipate being able to diagnose diabetes more efficiently and more broadly, we will also understand diabetes better — both the natural history and how new therapies impact the body,” said Prof. Feldman. Better testing is also needed as recent changes in who gets T1D vs. T2D have made it risky to categorize patients based on their age, ethnicity, or weight, as was common in the past due to the sharp distinctions that no longer exist. A cheap handheld test in the doctor’s office would help prevent adult patients from undergoing damaging incorrect treatment due to having been misdiagnosed with T2D. Also, there is growing evidence that early, aggressive new therapies of T1D improves patients’ long-term prognoses, possibly via halting the autoimmune attack on the pancreas and preserving some of the body’s ability to make insulin.
In addition to new diabetics, people who are at risk of developing T1D, such patients’ close relatives, may also benefit as the test will allow doctors to quickly and cheaply track their auto-antibody levels before onset of symptoms. Furthermore, because of its low cost, the test may allow the first broad screening for T1D auto-antibodies to identify those at risk in the population at large. The test would also facilitate testing for volunteers in programs such as "TrialNet," the nationwide USA study that monitors risk of relatives of T1D patients.
“The auto-antibodies truly are a crystal ball,” said Prof. Feldman, “Even if you don’t have diabetes yet, if you have one auto-antibody linked to diabetes in your blood, you are at significant risk; with multiple auto-antibodies, it’s more than 90% risk.” “There is great potential to capture people before they develop the disease,” added Prof. Feldman, “But the old test was prohibitive for that type of thinking because it was so costly and time-consuming.”
The microchip, a plasmonic chip, relies on fluorescence-based antibody detection. The team’s innovation is that the glass plates forming the base of each microchip are coated with an array of nanoparticle-sized islands of gold, which intensify the fluorescent signal, enabling reliable antibody detection. The test was validated using blood samples from people newly diagnosed with diabetes and from people without diabetes. Blood samples from both groups were tested with both the old test and the microchip-based test.
The study, by Zhang B, Kumar RB, Honjie D, and Feldman BJ, was described in the journal Nature Medicine, July 13, 2014 (online ahead of print).
Related Links:
Stanford University
Stanford University School of Medicine
The type-1 diabetes (T1D) microchip test was invented by a Stanford University (Stanford, CA, USA) team led by Stanford University School of Medicine's Brian Feldman, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pediatric endocrinology, the Bechtel Endowed Faculty Scholar in Pediatric Translational Medicine, and pediatric endocrinologist at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. It distinguishes between the two main forms of diabetes mellitus – T1D, being an autoimmune disease, has auto-antibodies not present with type-2 diabetes (T2D). Until now, making the distinction has required a slow, expensive test available only in sophisticated health-care settings. The new handheld, inexpensive test can be performed outside hospital settings and could improve patient care worldwide; including satisfying a global need in many parts of the world where the old test is prohibitively expensive and difficult to perform. The researchers are seeking US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the device.
The old, slow test detects the auto-antibodies using radioactive materials, takes several days, can only be performed by highly-trained lab staff, and costs several hundred dollars per patient. In contrast, the new, relatively low-cost microchip method uses no radioactivity, produces results in minutes, and requires minimal training to perform. And each chip, expected to cost about USD 20 to produce, can be used for upward of 15 tests. The microchip also uses a much smaller volume of blood than the older test: instead of a lab-based blood draw it can be done with blood from a finger prick.
“With the new test, not only do we anticipate being able to diagnose diabetes more efficiently and more broadly, we will also understand diabetes better — both the natural history and how new therapies impact the body,” said Prof. Feldman. Better testing is also needed as recent changes in who gets T1D vs. T2D have made it risky to categorize patients based on their age, ethnicity, or weight, as was common in the past due to the sharp distinctions that no longer exist. A cheap handheld test in the doctor’s office would help prevent adult patients from undergoing damaging incorrect treatment due to having been misdiagnosed with T2D. Also, there is growing evidence that early, aggressive new therapies of T1D improves patients’ long-term prognoses, possibly via halting the autoimmune attack on the pancreas and preserving some of the body’s ability to make insulin.
In addition to new diabetics, people who are at risk of developing T1D, such patients’ close relatives, may also benefit as the test will allow doctors to quickly and cheaply track their auto-antibody levels before onset of symptoms. Furthermore, because of its low cost, the test may allow the first broad screening for T1D auto-antibodies to identify those at risk in the population at large. The test would also facilitate testing for volunteers in programs such as "TrialNet," the nationwide USA study that monitors risk of relatives of T1D patients.
“The auto-antibodies truly are a crystal ball,” said Prof. Feldman, “Even if you don’t have diabetes yet, if you have one auto-antibody linked to diabetes in your blood, you are at significant risk; with multiple auto-antibodies, it’s more than 90% risk.” “There is great potential to capture people before they develop the disease,” added Prof. Feldman, “But the old test was prohibitive for that type of thinking because it was so costly and time-consuming.”
The microchip, a plasmonic chip, relies on fluorescence-based antibody detection. The team’s innovation is that the glass plates forming the base of each microchip are coated with an array of nanoparticle-sized islands of gold, which intensify the fluorescent signal, enabling reliable antibody detection. The test was validated using blood samples from people newly diagnosed with diabetes and from people without diabetes. Blood samples from both groups were tested with both the old test and the microchip-based test.
The study, by Zhang B, Kumar RB, Honjie D, and Feldman BJ, was described in the journal Nature Medicine, July 13, 2014 (online ahead of print).
Related Links:
Stanford University
Stanford University School of Medicine
Latest Immunology News
- Blood Test Identifies Lung Cancer Patients Who Can Benefit from Immunotherapy Drug
- Whole-Genome Sequencing Approach Identifies Cancer Patients Benefitting From PARP-Inhibitor Treatment
- Ultrasensitive Liquid Biopsy Demonstrates Efficacy in Predicting Immunotherapy Response
- Blood Test Could Identify Colon Cancer Patients to Benefit from NSAIDs
- Blood Test Could Detect Adverse Immunotherapy Effects
- Routine Blood Test Can Predict Who Benefits Most from CAR T-Cell Therapy
- New Test Distinguishes Vaccine-Induced False Positives from Active HIV Infection
- Gene Signature Test Predicts Response to Key Breast Cancer Treatment
- Chip Captures Cancer Cells from Blood to Help Select Right Breast Cancer Treatment
- Blood-Based Liquid Biopsy Model Analyzes Immunotherapy Effectiveness
- Signature Genes Predict T-Cell Expansion in Cancer Immunotherapy
- Molecular Microscope Diagnostic System Assesses Lung Transplant Rejection
- Blood Test Tracks Treatment Resistance in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer
- Luminescent Probe Measures Immune Cell Activity in Real Time
- Blood-Based Immune Cell Signatures Could Guide Treatment Decisions for Critically Ill Patients
- Novel Tool Predicts Most Effective Multiple Sclerosis Medication for Patients
Channels
Clinical Chemistry
view channel
New PSA-Based Prognostic Model Improves Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment
Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer death among American men, and about one in eight will be diagnosed in their lifetime. Screening relies on blood levels of prostate-specific antigen... Read more
Extracellular Vesicles Linked to Heart Failure Risk in CKD Patients
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects more than 1 in 7 Americans and is strongly associated with cardiovascular complications, which account for more than half of deaths among people with CKD.... Read moreMolecular Diagnostics
view channel
Diagnostic Device Predicts Treatment Response for Brain Tumors Via Blood Test
Glioblastoma is one of the deadliest forms of brain cancer, largely because doctors have no reliable way to determine whether treatments are working in real time. Assessing therapeutic response currently... Read more
Blood Test Detects Early-Stage Cancers by Measuring Epigenetic Instability
Early-stage cancers are notoriously difficult to detect because molecular changes are subtle and often missed by existing screening tools. Many liquid biopsies rely on measuring absolute DNA methylation... Read more
“Lab-On-A-Disc” Device Paves Way for More Automated Liquid Biopsies
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are tiny particles released by cells into the bloodstream that carry molecular information about a cell’s condition, including whether it is cancerous. However, EVs are highly... Read more
Blood Test Identifies Inflammatory Breast Cancer Patients at Increased Risk of Brain Metastasis
Brain metastasis is a frequent and devastating complication in patients with inflammatory breast cancer, an aggressive subtype with limited treatment options. Despite its high incidence, the biological... Read moreHematology
view channel
New Guidelines Aim to Improve AL Amyloidosis Diagnosis
Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a rare, life-threatening bone marrow disorder in which abnormal amyloid proteins accumulate in organs. Approximately 3,260 people in the United States are diagnosed... Read more
Fast and Easy Test Could Revolutionize Blood Transfusions
Blood transfusions are a cornerstone of modern medicine, yet red blood cells can deteriorate quietly while sitting in cold storage for weeks. Although blood units have a fixed expiration date, cells from... Read more
Automated Hemostasis System Helps Labs of All Sizes Optimize Workflow
High-volume hemostasis sections must sustain rapid turnaround while managing reruns and reflex testing. Manual tube handling and preanalytical checks can strain staff time and increase opportunities for error.... Read more
High-Sensitivity Blood Test Improves Assessment of Clotting Risk in Heart Disease Patients
Blood clotting is essential for preventing bleeding, but even small imbalances can lead to serious conditions such as thrombosis or dangerous hemorrhage. In cardiovascular disease, clinicians often struggle... Read moreMicrobiology
view channel
Comprehensive Review Identifies Gut Microbiome Signatures Associated With Alzheimer’s Disease
Alzheimer’s disease affects approximately 6.7 million people in the United States and nearly 50 million worldwide, yet early cognitive decline remains difficult to characterize. Increasing evidence suggests... Read moreAI-Powered Platform Enables Rapid Detection of Drug-Resistant C. Auris Pathogens
Infections caused by the pathogenic yeast Candida auris pose a significant threat to hospitalized patients, particularly those with weakened immune systems or those who have invasive medical devices.... Read morePathology
view channel
Engineered Yeast Cells Enable Rapid Testing of Cancer Immunotherapy
Developing new cancer immunotherapies is a slow, costly, and high-risk process, particularly for CAR T cell treatments that must precisely recognize cancer-specific antigens. Small differences in tumor... Read more
First-Of-Its-Kind Test Identifies Autism Risk at Birth
Autism spectrum disorder is treatable, and extensive research shows that early intervention can significantly improve cognitive, social, and behavioral outcomes. Yet in the United States, the average age... Read moreTechnology
view channel
Robotic Technology Unveiled for Automated Diagnostic Blood Draws
Routine diagnostic blood collection is a high‑volume task that can strain staffing and introduce human‑dependent variability, with downstream implications for sample quality and patient experience.... Read more
ADLM Launches First-of-Its-Kind Data Science Program for Laboratory Medicine Professionals
Clinical laboratories generate billions of test results each year, creating a treasure trove of data with the potential to support more personalized testing, improve operational efficiency, and enhance patient care.... Read moreAptamer Biosensor Technology to Transform Virus Detection
Rapid and reliable virus detection is essential for controlling outbreaks, from seasonal influenza to global pandemics such as COVID-19. Conventional diagnostic methods, including cell culture, antigen... Read more
AI Models Could Predict Pre-Eclampsia and Anemia Earlier Using Routine Blood Tests
Pre-eclampsia and anemia are major contributors to maternal and child mortality worldwide, together accounting for more than half a million deaths each year and leaving millions with long-term health complications.... Read moreIndustry
view channelNew Collaboration Brings Automated Mass Spectrometry to Routine Laboratory Testing
Mass spectrometry is a powerful analytical technique that identifies and quantifies molecules based on their mass and electrical charge. Its high selectivity, sensitivity, and accuracy make it indispensable... Read more
AI-Powered Cervical Cancer Test Set for Major Rollout in Latin America
Noul Co., a Korean company specializing in AI-based blood and cancer diagnostics, announced it will supply its intelligence (AI)-based miLab CER cervical cancer diagnostic solution to Mexico under a multi‑year... Read more
Diasorin and Fisher Scientific Enter into US Distribution Agreement for Molecular POC Platform
Diasorin (Saluggia, Italy) has entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with Fisher Scientific, part of Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, MA, USA), for the LIAISON NES molecular point-of-care... Read more







