Abstract
The ability to continually collect diagnostic information from the body during daily activity has revolutionized the monitoring of health and disease. Much of this monitoring, however, has been of physical vital signs, with the monitoring of molecular markers having been limited to glucose, primarily due to the lack of other medically relevant molecules for which continuous measurements are possible in bodily fluids. Electrochemical aptamer sensors, however, have a recent history of successful in-vivo demonstrations in rat animal models. Herein, we present the first report of real-time human molecular data collected using such sensors, successfully demonstrating their ability to measure the concentration of phenylalanine in dermal interstitial fluid after an oral bolus. To achieve this, we used a device that employs three hollow microneedles to couple interstitial fluid to an ex-vivo, phenylalanine-detecting sensor. The resulting architecture achieves good precision over the physiological concentration range and clinically relevant, 20 min time lag times. By also demonstrating 90 day dry room-temperature shelf-storage, the reported work also reaches another important milestone in moving such sensors to the clinic. While the devices demonstrated are not without remaining challenges, the results at minimum provide a simple method by which aptamer sensors can be quickly moved into human subjects testing.
Supplementary materials
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Supplementary Information
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Additional graphs to aid reader understanding of data findings that did not fit in the Manuscript.
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Design Files
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2D CAD files that can be used to create shadow mask for fabrication of thin-film electrodes using wet etch techniques as described in the Methods. Also includes the designs used to laser cut adhesives used to fix microneedles to devices.
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