New, Portable Lab-on-a-Chip Identifies Concentration of COVID-19 Antibodies in Human Blood In 15 Minutes

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 01 Oct 2020
A new, portable lab-on-a-chip can identify the presence of COVID-19 antibodies in blood with greater speed and efficiency than the current standard “enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay” or ELISA technology.

Researchers from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI, USA) have developed the device and have shown that it can identify the concentration of COVID-19 antibodies in human blood in 15 minutes. That process normally takes between hours and a few days. The device, which is actually a miniature ELISA, can achieve its faster results with smaller amounts of blood. The work has particular value for the validation of convalescent plasma as a treatment for COVID-19. Microfluidic devices shrink multiple lab functions onto a single chip measured in millimeters or centimeters. In addition to needing smaller sample sizes, they also increase accuracy. This particular system can detect concentration levels of antibodies -something that can vary greatly from plasma donor to donor.

Image: New, Portable Lab-on-a-Chip Identifies Concentration of COVID-19 Antibodies in Human Blood In 15 Minutes (Photo courtesy of University of Michigan)

Specifically, the device detects the presence and amount of neutralizing immunoglobulin -antibodies created by the immune system within seven to 10 days of a COVID-19 infection. Only donors with high levels are likely to provide samples that could be effective in treatment, such as convalescent plasma therapy. The treatment involves taking blood from subjects that have previously been diagnosed with COVID-19, and then separating out the plasma - the liquid portion of the blood that contains antibodies. Those antibodies are then given to patients therapeutically in an attempt to boost the immune response. To bolster the data available on convalescent plasma treatments, more donors with high-titer antibody concentrations are needed. The methodology developed by the University of Michigan team provides an efficient and effective way forward.

Screening for proper donors is typically handled by standard ELISA, which requires sample processing and a refrigerator-sized plate-reader for taking measurements. Delays are exacerbated by having to send samples to a lab for analysis. The lab-on-a-chip approach analyzes on site and delivers quantitative evaluations with finger prick’s worth of blood – eight microliters. A traditional ELISA machine requires 100 microliters to do its work. The system is contained in a device the size of a portable 3D printer.

“Convalescent plasma is a treatment that can be very effective – but for it to have the best chance to work, it needs to have rigorous standards, which include assessing the presence of high-titer neutralizing antibodies,” said David Perlin, Ph.D., chief scientific officer and senior vice president of the Hackensack Meridian Center for Discovery and Innovation, and one of the new study’s authors. “This paper shows how the antibody thresholds can mean a better potential COVID-19 treatment – and also better outcomes.”

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