posted on 2018-05-01, 00:00authored byKamal G. Shah, Vidhi Singh, Peter C. Kauffman, Koji Abe, Paul Yager
Paper-based diagnostic tests based
on the lateral flow immunoassay
concept promise low-cost, point-of-care detection of infectious diseases,
but such assays suffer from poor limits of detection. One factor that
contributes to poor analytical performance is a reliance on low-contrast
chromophoric optical labels such as gold nanoparticles. Previous attempts
to improve the sensitivity of paper-based diagnostics include replacing
chromophoric labels with enzymes, fluorophores, or phosphors at the
expense of increased fluidic complexity or the need for device readers
with costly optoelectronics. Several groups, including our own, have
proposed mobile phones as suitable point-of-care readers due to their
low cost, ease of use, and ubiquity. However, extant mobile phone
fluorescence readers require costly optical filters and were typically
validated with only one camera sensor module, which is inappropriate
for potential point-of-care use. In response, we propose to couple
low-cost ultraviolet light-emitting diodes with long Stokes-shift
quantum dots to enable ratiometric mobile phone fluorescence measurements
without optical filters. Ratiometric imaging with unmodified smartphone
cameras improves the contrast and attenuates the impact of excitation
intensity variability by 15×. Practical application was shown
with a lateral flow immunoassay for influenza A with nucleoproteins
spiked into simulated nasal matrix. Limits of detection of 1.5 and
2.6 fmol were attained on two mobile phones, which are comparable
to a gel imager (1.9 fmol), 10× better than imaging gold nanoparticles
on a scanner (18 fmol), and >2 orders of magnitude better than
gold
nanoparticle-labeled assays imaged with mobile phones. Use of the
proposed filter-free mobile phone imaging scheme is a first step toward
enabling a new generation of highly sensitive, point-of-care fluorescence
assays.