3d printing and assay development for point-of-care ... · pdf fileii 3d printing and assay...

148
3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications by SHREESHA JAGADEESH A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Masters of Applied Science in Electrical & Computer Engineering Department University of Toronto © Copyright by Shreesha Jagadeesh 2016

Upload: duongdien

Post on 28-Mar-2018

214 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications

by

SHREESHA JAGADEESH

A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Masters of Applied Science in

Electrical & Computer Engineering Department University of Toronto

© Copyright by Shreesha Jagadeesh 2016

Page 2: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

ii

3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care

Applications

Shreesha Jagadeesh

Masters of Applied Science

Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering

University of Toronto

2016

Abstract

Existing centralized labs do not serve patients adequately in remote areas. To enable universal

timely healthcare, there is a need to develop low cost, portable systems that can diagnose

multiple disease (Point-of-Care (POC) devices). Future POC diagnostics can be more multi-

functional if medical device vendors can develop interoperability standards. This thesis

developed the following medical diagnostic modules: Plasma from 25 µl blood was extracted

through a filter membrane to demonstrate a 3D printed sample preparation module. Sepsis

biomarker, C - reactive protein, was quantified through adsorption on nylon beads to demonstrate

bead-based assay suitable for 3D printed disposable cartridge module. Finally, a modular

fluorescent detection kit was built using 3D printed parts to detect CD4 cells in a disposable

cartridge from ChipCare Corp. Due to the modularity enabled by 3D printing technique, the

developed units can be easily adapted to detect other diseases.

Page 3: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

iii

Acknowledgments

My Master’s degree at the University of Toronto has been a great experience to me and has

provided me invaluable insights into academic research at the top Canadian institute of higher

education. The past 2 years have been filled with fond memories of my time at the beautiful St.

George campus in the heart of Toronto, one of North America’s largest metropolises. I would

like to thank the following people without whom this thesis would not be possible.

Professor Stewart Aitchison has been an incredible supervisor not only providing me excellent

guidance for my research work but also giving me valuable career advice on industrial

collaboration. He has provided me with a free and flexible academic environment enabling me

to carry out my thesis research with complete freedom. In addition, he has been available

whenever I have questions about my coursework and research directions. He has provided me

complete freedom in choosing co-curricular activities like training courses, seminars and

conferences. I am grateful to Professor Iain Thayne from the University of Glasgow, my alma

mater, for recommending me to him back in 2013.

I am grateful to my colleagues and other researchers in the Galbraith office and other

researchers including Suthamathy Sathananthan, Matthew Shipton, Pisek Kultavewuti, Arash

Joushagani, Mohammad Alam, Xiao Sun, Kevin Joseph, Kevin De Haan, Yuan Ming Chen and

Zhongfa Liao for providing me tips on good research practices and navigating the University of

Toronto academic system.

I am especially thankful to Dr. Lindsey Fiddes and Dr. Dan Voicu from the MIE’s Center for

Microfluidic Systems for training me on all the cleanroom equipment and supplying me with

consumables. In particular, Lindsey has been an invaluable resource on 3D Printing and Soft

Lithographic techniques on which my thesis is based on. I am also thankful to Dr. Carol

Laschinger and Aric Pahnke from Dr. Milica Radisic’s research group for providing me access to

their 3D printing facilities at short notice. I would like to thank Dr. Douaud Shah from the

Techna Institute for allowing me to use the cleanroom facilities and training me.

My special thanks to ChipCare Corp for providing me space at their lab for conducting

fluorescence assays. I am also indebted to their Dr. Lu Chen, Dr. Susan Bortolin and Rakesh

Page 4: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

iv

Nayyar for guiding me during the assay development process by providing bio-chemical

expertise and troubleshooting my experiments. My special thanks to Jun Yang for helping me to

get started on the experiments by providing technical usage instructions. I am grateful to James

Dou for accepting me as a Mitacs intern and to James Fraser for providing me with a 3D printer

and more than adequate resources to perform whatever experiments I chose to conduct.

On a personal note, I would like to thank my parents and my uncle for not just providing me a

line of credit but also guiding me during the entire degree. To all these people, I am eternally

indebted for giving me a chance to study at the top research institution in Canada.

Page 5: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

v

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments .................................................................................................................... iii

Table of Contents ....................................................................................................................... v

List of Abbreviations ............................................................................................................. viii

List of Tables ........................................................................................................................... xi

List of Figures ......................................................................................................................... xii

List of Appendices ................................................................................................................... xx

Chapter 1 .................................................................................................................................... 1

Chapter Organization ............................................................................................................ 1

1.1 Aim ................................................................................................................................ 1

1.2 Chapter 2: Introduction .................................................................................................. 3

1.3 Chapter 3: Sample Preparation Module ......................................................................... 4

1.4 Chapter 4: Bead-based Assay ........................................................................................ 4

1.5 Optical Detection System .............................................................................................. 4

1.6 Chapter 6: Future Work and Conclusion ....................................................................... 4

Chapter 2 .................................................................................................................................... 5

Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 5

2.1 Motivation for POC Modular Design ............................................................................ 5

2.2 Advantages of POC ........................................................................................................ 7

2.3 Reason for POC blood tests ......................................................................................... 10

2.4 Advantages of 3D Printers ........................................................................................... 11

2.5 3D Printers in Research ............................................................................................... 13

2.6 Comparison of commercial desktop 3D printers ......................................................... 14

Sample Preparation Module ................................................................................................ 15

Page 6: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

vi

3.1 Background .................................................................................................................. 15

3.2 Methods of Blood Filtration ......................................................................................... 17

3.3 Centrifugal-force based separation .............................................................................. 17

3.4 Filter Membrane-based separation ............................................................................... 28

3.5 Plasma Extraction Experiment ..................................................................................... 29

Chapter 4 .................................................................................................................................. 32

Bead-based Assay Module .................................................................................................. 32

4.1 Sepsis Literature Review ............................................................................................. 32

4.2 Bead-based Assay Review ........................................................................................... 38

4.3 Assay Development ..................................................................................................... 41

4.4 Adsorption on bead surface ......................................................................................... 45

4.5 Streptavidin-Biotin Assay ............................................................................................ 47

4.6 C - reactive Protein assay ............................................................................................. 51

Chapter 5 .................................................................................................................................. 58

Optical Detection System .................................................................................................... 58

5.1 Point-of-Care manufacturer ......................................................................................... 58

5.2 Existing HIV diagnostic methods ................................................................................ 58

5.3 HIV monitoring using CD4 counts .............................................................................. 61

5.4 Fluorescence Microscope Background ........................................................................ 62

5.5 System Description ...................................................................................................... 64

5.6 Issues resolved ............................................................................................................. 68

5.7 Verification by CD4 Cell and fluorescent bead counting ............................................ 69

Chapter 6 .................................................................................................................................. 70

Future work and conclusions .............................................................................................. 70

6.1 Conclusions .................................................................................................................. 70

6.2 Future Work ................................................................................................................. 71

Page 7: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

vii

References or Bibliography ..................................................................................................... 74

Appendix A: Solidworks Drawings .................................................................................... 85

Appendix B: COMSOL Simulation for Chapter 3 ............................................................ 102

Appendix C: Streptavidin and CRP adsorption recipes (Chapter 4) ................................. 120

Appendix D: 3D Printing tips ........................................................................................... 124

Page 8: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

viii

List of Abbreviations

ASSURED Affordable Sensitive Specific User-friendly Rapid Equipment-free and Delivered to

those who need it

CDC Centers for Disease Control

CNT Carbon Nano Tubes

CRP- C-Reactive Protein

CSR Corporate Social Responsibility

DA Diagnostic Accuracy

EHR Electronic Health Record

EMR Electronic Medical Record

FDA Federal Drug Administration

FDM- Fused Deposition Modelling

GSID Global Solutions for Infectious Diseases

HRP Horse Radish Peroxidase

ICU- Intensive Care Unit

IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

IP Intellectual Property

ISO International Organization for Standardization

IVD In vitro Diagnostics

HCV Hepatitis C Virus

HIV Human Immuno Virus

Page 9: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

ix

HCV Human Papilloma Virus

LAMP Loop Mediated Isothermal Amplification

LCA Ligase Chain Reaction

LMIC Lower and Middle Income Countries

LOD Limit of Detection

MDA Multiple Displacement Amplification

NASBA Nucleic Acid Sequence-based Amplification

NGO Non-Governmental Organization

NPV Negative Predictive Value

PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction

PDMS Poly-DiMethylSiloxane

POC Point of Care

POCT Point-of-Care Testing

PPV Positive Predictive Value

QA Quality Assurance

R&D Research and Development

RCA Rolling Circle Amplification

SDA Strand Displacement Amplification

SLA- Stereo lithography

TB Tuberculosis

Page 10: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

x

TEC – Thermoelectric Controller

TMA Transcription Mediated Amplification

WHO World Health Organization

Page 11: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xi

List of Tables

Table 2-1 Comparison of some popular 3D printers [35,36]. The Form1+ and the Zortrax were

used in this thesis. ......................................................................................................................... 14

Table 4-1 Definitions of Diagnostic Accuracy of Biomarker (Courtesy [59]) ............................. 35

Table 4-2 Diagnostic Accuracy (DA) Values of C-Reactive Protein, Procalcitonin, Serum

Amyloid A, Mannan and Antimannan and IFN-γ -inducible Protein Biomarkers (Courtesy [59])

....................................................................................................................................................... 35

Table 4-3 Commercial CRP detecting systems (Courtesy [59]) All except the last two, use either

plasma or serum instead of whole blood to quantify CRP. ........................................................... 37

Table 7-1 Qualitative Assay for detecting Streptavidin on Nylon beads .................................... 120

Table 7-2 Quantitative assay for fluorescent detection of Streptavidin on Nylon bead ............. 121

Table 7-3 Direct (Non-specific) Adsorption procedure for detecting CRP on Nylon Beads .... 122

Table 7-4 Sandwich assay for CRP detection with coating of antibody C6 on Nylon bead ...... 123

Page 12: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xii

List of Figures

Figure 1:1 Applications of 3D printing in various stages of Point-of-Care Diagnostics. In this

thesis, a sample preparation module, disposable cartridge module for bead-based assay and an

optical detection system were built using parts created from a 3D printer ..................................... 1

Figure 1:2 The above schematic illustrates the utility of having a diagnostic kit with a constant

detection scheme and a variable bio-marker cartridge. The development of new assays would

require just replacing the cartridge instead of developing an entirely new diagnostic kit .............. 3

Figure 2:1 Typical steps followed in diagnostic instruments. Sampling from the patient (blood,

urine, saliva, etc.) is usually done off-chip. The biological markers present in the sample are

usually detected on a disposable chip after stimulation from an optical source. The signal can be

collected using a camera such as a Charge-Coupled Display (CCD) camera. Finally, the results

are interpreted in the analysis step. ................................................................................................. 5

Figure 2:2 Framework for understanding 3D Printing paths and values ([22]). Various levels of

adoption of 3D printing are seen in businesses. Some businesses tend to replace their entire

supply chain, while others seek out 3D printing capabilities only when rapid prototyping or cost-

effective customization capability is needed. ............................................................................... 11

Figure 3:1 Blood Composition (Reprinted with permission from © M. Kersaudy-Kerhoas and E.

Sollier [39]) Red Blood Cells (RBCs) and Plasma occupy nearly occupy the entire volume of

blood. Plasma contains useful biomarkers for different diseases and needs separation from RBCs

to improve optical detection performance. ................................................................................... 15

Figure 3:2 In helical/spiral channels, centrifugal forces cause recirculation patterns that tend to

concentrate particles within the vortices [47] ............................................................................... 17

Figure 3:3 Geometry of a straight channel developed in COMSOL Multiphysics. The channel

was 20 mm long and had a uniform rectangular cross-sectional area of 2 mm x 2 mm. .............. 19

Figure 3:4 A) (Uniform) Velocity Profile at the inlet of a straight channel (0.05 m/s) and B)

(Parabolic) Fluid velocity profile at the output of the straight channel. The simulation illustrates

the effects of solving a 3-dimensional fluidic equation. ............................................................... 20

Page 13: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xiii

Figure 3:5 Time lapse snapshots of particles at t=0 s and 0.1 s. In A) the particles were uniformly

distributed to the inlet boundary condition and had the same velocity of 0.05 m/s. In B) The

particles had traversed 5 mm along the channel and they had a non-uniform velocity profile as

indicated by the darker red colors in the middle and (slower) blue colored dots in the periphery

Focusing of particles as they traverse the length of the channel was observed. ........................... 21

Figure 3:6 Effects of the particle diameter on the flow trajectories. A) 10 um particle trajectories

and B) 100 µm particle trajectories. Larger particles (100 um) were seen to be significantly

affected by gravity compared to the smaller 10 um particles. ...................................................... 22

Figure 3:7 A 2-loop helix with 2 mm x 2mm channel dimensions, 20 mm helix diameter and 20

mm pitch. (All shown dimensions in the graph are in millimeters). The outlet was geometrically

split into two equal sections to observe the effects of particle separation. The helix was drawn in

Solidworks. ................................................................................................................................... 23

Figure 3:8 Velocity profile at the output of the 2-loop helix. Higher velocity of the fluid was

noticed at the outer edges of the channel compared to the inner side. This is shown by the darker

red regions towards the left side of the output face. ..................................................................... 24

Figure 3:9 Snapshots of particle trajectories at A) t=0 s, and B) t=0.2 s when particles reach the

outlet. As noticed from B), the particles were more concentrated at the (outer) wall of the

channel denoted by Outlet 1. It was also observed that there were particles, which never reached

the output irrespective of how long the simulations were run for. They are seen in B) as blue

particles trailing in the channel. .................................................................................................... 24

Figure 3:10 Excel graph of enrichment factor for different diameters and particle numbers. The

data suggests that the number of particles at the inlet does not have a significant effect on the

enrichment factor. It stays constant at ~1.30. This would be imply that the Outlet 1 has 30%

more particles than Outlet 2. This would be ideal for blood cell separation because the number of

cells would be different for different patients. .............................................................................. 25

Figure 3:11 The particle diameter’s influence on the Enrichment Factor. A rising trend was seen.

Theoretically, infinite Enrichment Factor (100% separation into the Outlet 1) would be seen for

particles diameter larger than 0.140 mm. ...................................................................................... 26

Page 14: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xiv

Figure 3:12 The solution time dependency on the number of (1 µm) particles. Orders of

magnitude increase results in less than a linear increase in the time taken to complete the

simulation. ..................................................................................................................................... 27

Figure 3:13 Design 1 for the filtration module. The capillary channels of 0.5 mm heights and

widths are seen as horizontal stripes in the middle. The hole in the center leads to a collection

well. Note that the filter membrane was transparent and covers an area sli ................................. 29

Figure 3:14 Fluorescent images of A) beads present in the whole blood before filtration and b)

after filtration in the extracted plasma from capillary channels. The presence of beads in B)

indicate the failure of the filtration process through leakage of the whole ................................... 30

Figure 3:15 A) Blood droplets in the six equally spaced inlets on the clamp part for uniform

distribution of the blood and right B) After filtration picture with the clamp removed. The

presence of the clamp secured the membrane filter and reduced the air gap. Thus, plasma was

seen to be more widely dispersed throughout compared to the previous filter design. The

Solidworks drawing files are listed in Appendix A. ..................................................................... 31

Figure 3:16 Fluorescent images of a) remnants of blood on top of the filter and b) extracted

plasma from the capillaries. The second design with the clamp on top of the membrane filter

prevented leakage and hence no fluorescent beads were seen. ..................................................... 31

Figure 4:1 Classification of Inflammatory response ([59]). Sepsis is diagnosed when both

infectious agent and inflammation is present in the patient. The cause of this infection could be

bacteria, fungus, virus, etc and they are denoted by circles indicating the relative frequency at

which they occur. Similarly, inflammation could be because of trauma, burns, pancreatitis or

other causes. .................................................................................................................................. 33

Figure 4:2 Thresholds of different markers for distinguishing infectious pathogens in blood

(Reprinted with permission from © 2011 Taylor & Francis [62]). The bacterial cause of Sepsis is

marked by a high value of CRP beyond 100 mg/l of blood. In contrast, viral causes of Sepsis are

marked by elevated levels of CRP but they tend to stay below 10 mg/l. Both regimes of CRP

levels are quantified using a bead-based assay in section 4.6 ....................................................... 36

Page 15: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xv

Figure 4:3 BD CBA test with 5 unique (A-E) beads having different fluorescent intensity ([64]).

In commercial bead-based assays, the beads have a unique color as well as a unique capture

antibody on their surface. This allows multiplexed sample diagnostics ....................................... 38

Figure 4:4 Antibody conjugation of the BD’s CBA set using sulfo-SMCC chemistry ([64]). The

conjugation of capture antibodies is performed using chemical bonding techniques. However,

later in this chapter, a technique for attaching antibodies through passive adsorption is

demonstrated. ................................................................................................................................ 39

Figure 4:5 Fluorescence Emission process flow ([73]) Absorption of a suitable photon causes the

electron to jump from the ground state to an excited state. The decay is usually instantaneous and

is accompanied by the emission of longer wavelength light. ....................................................... 42

Figure 4:6 Absorption and Emission spectra of 3 Phycobiliproteins – R-Phycoerythrin (RPE), B-

Phycoerythrin (BPE) and Allophycocyanin (APC) ([72]). R-PE has a broad absorption spectrum

and a narrow emission spectrum centered close to 585 nm .......................................................... 43

Figure 4:7 Antibody structure showing the Heavy chains and the Light chains (Courtesy [74]) 44

Figure 4:8 Large (1.5 mm diameter) Nylon beads can be trapped in 3D printed fluidic channels

within a disposable cartridge. ....................................................................................................... 47

Figure 4:9 Fluorescent intensities of beads with no added Streptavidin and Streptavidin-coated

beads upon the addition of Biotin conjugated with R-PE ............................................................. 48

Figure 4:10 Image of the nylon bead with 8 pico moles of Streptavidin. 3x higher intensity was

observed in the presence of protein. The image was taken with a CCD camera attached to a

fluorescent microscope with each snapshot having a 50 ms exposure and with image ............... 48

Figure 4:11 Image of bead with no protein. Only the circular outline of the bead is visible under

the fluorescent microscope. The non-zero background could possibly be attributed to auto-

fluorescence of the bead itself. ...................................................................................................... 49

Figure 4:12 Variation of Fluorescent Intensity with added Streptavidin (direct adsorption). The

Streptavidin was added in increasing concentrations, incubated and washed. BSA was added to

block unbound sites on the surface of the beads. Finally, Biotin-RPE was added to tubes

Page 16: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xvi

containing the beads to use the fluorescent methods of detection. The images were captured by a

CCD camera and then fluorescent intensity information was extracted using ImageJ by drawing a

rectangular box and using the Analysis-> Measure toolbar. The orange line at approximately

5000 intensity units represents the background fluorescence. ...................................................... 50

Figure 4:13 Flow chart for direct (non-specific) capture of the CRP antigen. Nylon beads were

used as a substrate for capturing antigen through adsorption. They are then bound with primary

antibody C2 followed by secondary antibody (IgG1 conjugated with R-PE). The secondary

antibody has a fluorescent tag that emits strongly at 585 nm. Additional blocking and washing

steps are not shown. ...................................................................................................................... 51

Figure 4:14 Fluorescent intensity emitted on the surface of the bead when coated with CRP. A

linear trend was observed with the emitted fluorescent intensity from the bead increasing with

higher input concentration of CRP on the bead. The orange line at approximately 5000 intensity

units represents the background fluorescence. .............................................................................. 52

Figure 4:15 Flow chart for indirect (specific) capture and fluorescent detection of the CRP

antigen. This is similar to Figure 4:12 except there was an additional step initially to coat the

Capture Antibody. This method is more specific to CRP and has a better Limit of Detection due

to the smaller quantity of CRP required. ...................................................................................... 54

Figure 4:16 Fluorescent intensity vs. concentration of CRP using the indirect capture. The orange

line around 5000 intensity units represents background fluorescent intensity of the bead. A

logarithmic trend in the emitted fluorescent intensity was observed. ........................................... 55

Figure 4:17 Stability of the binding across washing steps. The number of washing steps (to

remove any excess reagents) caused an insignificant change in the emitted intensity. This

suggests that the binding of the protein on the bead surface was relatively stable as was discussed

in section 4.4 ................................................................................................................................. 56

Figure 4:18 Effect of exposure on the emitted fluorescent light intensity. Due to the technical

limitations of the imaging unit, snapshots were taken every 30 seconds until the emitted intensity

faded away to the level of background. ........................................................................................ 57

Page 17: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xvii

Figure 5:1 Epi-fluorescent microscope ([98]). The light source emits all wavelengths which are

filtered by the excitation filter within the filter cube. The sample receives this light and emits a

longer wavelength collected by the objective lens. Then it passes through the emission filter into

either the eyepiece or the camera. ................................................................................................. 63

Figure 5:2 Illustration of the Filter Cube containing the Dichroic mirror and the filters (Courtesy

Nikon [99]) The illumination is from the right side and the light is reflected downwards onto the

specimen using the dichromatic mirror. Then the emitted fluorescence light is allowed to pass

through the same mirror and filtered by the Emission filter before optical detection through a

camera ........................................................................................................................................... 63

Figure 5:3 CD4 cell counting setup prototyped using 3D printed parts. The 3D printed

components are denoted in color. The setup was screwed onto a standard optical base. The other

external components were translation stage for the optical tube, rotary stage for the laser, stepper

motor and the disposable cartridge itself. ..................................................................................... 64

Figure 5:4 Cartridge Module with custom-designed sliding base for easy removal. The parts in

pink were 3D printed while the green layer in the middle was the PCB controlling the Stepper

Motor. The cartridge is shown inserted on the right side with its bellow facing the blue shaft of

the motor. ...................................................................................................................................... 65

Figure 5:5 Resuspension Cartridge Holder. The transparent piece at the top is a representation of

the older Resuspension cartridge. ................................................................................................. 66

Figure 5:6 Laser Module containing custom-designed adapters for the Z-axis stage, Rotary Stage

and the Laser Covers ..................................................................................................................... 66

Figure 5:7 Optical Tube Holder Module with the grey xyz translation stage controlling the

relative position of the tube (not shown) ...................................................................................... 67

Figure 7:1 Drawing of the 3D printed Membrane Filter Holder from Chapter 3 with 0.5 mm

capillaries in the middle ................................................................................................................ 85

Figure 7:2: The cap for filter membrane holder for the sample preparation from chapter 3 ........ 86

Figure 7:3: Design 1 for holding the Nylon beads from Chapter 4 .............................................. 87

Page 18: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xviii

Figure 7:4 Design 1 Bead Well Cover (from Chapter 4) .............................................................. 88

Figure 7:5 Design 2 for holding the Nylon beads from Chapter 4, there is a drainage channel of 1

mm width below the bead well. .................................................................................................... 89

Figure 7:6 Design 2: The cover for the bead well for the bead based assay in Chapter 4. ........... 90

Figure 7:7 3D printed base for the xyz translation stage holding the Optical Tubes in Chapter 5 91

Figure 7:8 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed Optical Tube Holder ...................................... 92

Figure 7:9 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed holder for the z translation stage for the Laser

....................................................................................................................................................... 93

Figure 7:10 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed adapter from the Rotary stage to the

translation stage ............................................................................................................................ 94

Figure 7:11 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for inserting the laser ........................... 95

Figure 7:12 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for enclosing the laser. The screw holes

are M2 and they pass straight through to the Rotart stage ............................................................ 96

Figure 7:13 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that holds both the new cartridge and the

stepper motor. ............................................................................................................................... 97

Figure 7:14 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for holding the black cartridge and

sliding it into the main Cartridge Holder module ......................................................................... 98

Figure 7:15 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for holding the Resuspension cartridge

and sliding it into the base ............................................................................................................ 99

Figure 7:16 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that supports the PCB and has a groove

that slides into the base ............................................................................................................... 100

Figure 7:17 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that connects the Optical bench to the

Cartridge Holder module ............................................................................................................ 101

Figure 10:1 User interface for the Zortrax M200 ....................................................................... 124

Page 19: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xix

Figure 10:2 The desired model in the middle protected by sacrificial rods of arbitrary dimensions

..................................................................................................................................................... 126

Figure 10:3 Price comparison for top 3D printers [37, 38]. Assuming that printers last just one

year, the above table gives a rough estimate of the costs involved in using these two 3D printers.

..................................................................................................................................................... 127

Page 20: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

xx

List of Appendices

Appendix A: Solidworks drawings

Appendix B: COMSOL parameters

Appendix C: Recipes for Bead-based assay

Appendix D: 3D Printing techniques

Page 21: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

1

Chapter 1

Chapter Organization

1.1 Aim

The capability of providing rapid medical test results at the patient’s location is the main

hallmark of Point-of-Care (POC) diagnostic kits. POC kits typically have a series of modules

that work in unison to detect a specific disease.

This thesis proposes to develop device components to be used in the next generation of Point-of-

Care (POC) diagnostics kits. The components that are developed are: a) Sample Preparation

Module b) Bead-based Assay Module and c) Optical Detection Module. A proof-of-concept

protein assay was used to illustrate the general application of this bead-based test. Additionally, a

fluorescent particle detection system was built to count CD4 cells for HIV monitoring.

Figure 1:1 Applications of 3D printing in various stages of Point-of-Care Diagnostics. In

this thesis, a sample preparation module, disposable cartridge module for bead-based assay

and an optical detection system were built using parts created from a 3D printer

The filter membrane separation method for the sample preparation module in Chapter 3 has been

replicated from literature for a smaller quantity of blood. The COMSOL models developed for

the helical geometry are something that is not found in literature. The bead based assay using

Page 22: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

2

Nylon beads for fluorescent detection of CRP in Chapter 4 is an advancement over existing

Agarose bead-based adsorption method. The modular fluorescent detection kit designed in

Chapter 5 is an improvement of the bench top unit previously used at ChipCare Corp.

The three modules that were developed and prototyped through 3D printing have the potential to

be adapted into a generalized diagnostic kit. Many Lab-on-a-chip device have the limitation of

only detecting specific diseases. The bead-based assay in a disposable cartridge developed in this

thesis can overcome such limitation by extending the disease detection capability to any blood

protein marker. The advantage of segregating the biomarker identification from the detection

system is that the overall medical kit is now more versatile. The proof-of-concept bead-based

assay module here can be theoretically be used for identifying any blood plasma biomarker

amenable to fluorescent methods of detection. The key idea is that further assays can be

developed relatively easy after the diagnostic platform is validated for the first assay.

The generalized Fluorescent Detection Kit described in Chapter 5 was used to detect

fluorescently tagged cells for HIV monitoring. The utility of this kit can be extended to any

fluorescent marker through the development of a bead-based assay. For example, if future

researchers from ChipCare Corp were to include Sepsis detection, all they would need to do is

swap out the Cell Counting Cartridge and replace it with the newly developed Bead-Based Assay

cartridge as shown in the figure below:

Page 23: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

3

Figure 1:2 The above schematic illustrates the utility of having a diagnostic kit with a

constant detection scheme and a variable bio-marker cartridge. The development of new

assays would require just replacing the cartridge instead of developing an entirely new

diagnostic kit

Due to the digital nature of 3D Printing, it has the potential to accelerate the development of new

assays as well as shorten the development cycle for improving existing assays. By having the

designs as a digital copy available for rapid prototyping using 3D Printing, POC device

interoperability will be a step closer.

1.2 Chapter 2: Introduction

Chapter 2 provides an overview to the thesis and the motivation as to why this topic was chosen

for research during this Master’s degree. It provides a general introduction to the Point-of-Care

testing and the challenges to overcome before they are available to a wider market. Statistics on

the impact of Sepsis on the general population is given and current diagnostic techniques are

elaborated. Then, steps required to make this diagnosis on a portable platform are discussed.

Additive manufacturing is explored in greater detail and adopted in this thesis due to the wide

range of benefits and the rapidly advancing technology. Finally, desktop 3D printers are

compared to give researchers a better picture of their options before purchasing one.

Page 24: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

4

1.3 Chapter 3: Sample Preparation Module

Chapter 3 introduces sample preparation as an essential step in POC applications. Towards this

goal, separation of blood cells from plasma is explored using a variety of techniques drawn from

literature. Two such techniques, filtration and centrifugation, were found to be compatible for 3D

Printing technology and hence dealt in more detail. The centrifugal approach uses a syringe-

based pumping mechanism for injecting fluid through helical channels exploring size-based

separation of spherical particles. Simulation were performed using COMSOL Multiphysics to

develop a proof-of-concept model for separating particles from liquid. The membrane-filter

based separation technique uses an off-the-shelf membrane filter with pore dimensions smaller

than the blood cells to exclude cells larger than 3 µm. The latter technique was successfully

demonstrated on a 3D printed disposable capillary chip.

1.4 Chapter 4: Bead-based Assay

Chapter 4 deals with the development of a bead-based assay that has the potential to be

integrated into a 3D printed disposable cartridge. A fluorescent test for protein on Nylon

Polyamide beads is elaborated. Through direct adsorption of Streptavidin on the bead, a yes/no

test is initially demonstrated. This is followed by a adapting this test to quantify a Sepsis marker

called C-Reactive Protein (CRP). The specificity of the test is further improved by utilizing

CRP-specific antibodies and the corresponding results are discussed.

1.5 Optical Detection System

Chapter 5 elaborates system-level application of 3D printing through an internship at a POC

medical diagnostics company, ChipCare Corp. In one such application, a compact fluorescence

microscope customized for ChipCare’s bead-based assay is designed and 3D Printed. A

multifunctional lab prototype was developed and used extensively for CD4+ cell detection.

Additionally, the setup is being used to validate the lab results of the commercial CD4+ cell

counting handheld device that the company is planning to commercialize.

1.6 Chapter 6: Future Work and Conclusion

Chapter 6 dwells on ways to improve the modules discussed so far. The findings from the

previous sections are also summarized.

Page 25: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

5

Chapter 2

Introduction

2.1 Motivation for POC Modular Design

A Point-of-Care system, which can function as a multipurpose diagnostic platform, is a goal

targeted by the World Health Organization (WHO). Towards this end, a global consultation was

held to discuss interoperability standards between medical devices as well as device connectivity

[1]. The goal of the WHO consultation was to come up with standards so that testing kits from

different vendors would be interoperable. In the diagram below, the general sequence of steps

when performing a medical test is illustrated.

Figure 2:1 Typical steps followed in diagnostic instruments. Sampling from the patient

(blood, urine, saliva, etc.) is usually done off-chip. The biological markers present in the

sample are usually detected on a disposable chip after stimulation from an optical source.

The signal can be collected using a camera such as a Charge-Coupled Display (CCD)

camera. Finally, the results are interpreted in the analysis step.

The key idea is that when scientists develop, say, a new diagnostic test, the bio recognition

module can be replaced keeping the rest of the diagnostic kit intact. Building modules that work

equally well with other modules from different vendors through a plug-and-play approach would

cause an innovation boom that would fuel the rapid adoption of POC diagnostics.

During infectious disease outbreaks, rapid diagnostic tests have to be available so that they are

contained. Tests available only in centralized health facilities require the samples to be

transported to the laboratory and the results sent back to the patient of the particular clinic. In

remote or rural settings, this can take days or even weeks, delaying the identification of the

pathogen and compromising the treatment.

Page 26: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

6

Having a different technology for each diagnostic means that the health centers have to train

personnel for each type of device being used. However, if there was a common diagnostic

platform on which a multitude of tests can be performed, local health centers will not have to

struggle to maintain separate equipment for each testing. Chin et al [2] feel that inspite of rapid

advances in individual components of a Lab-on-a-chip components, there is a dearth of system-

level applications relevant for clinical use in a point-of-care setting. In this thesis, work is done

to build both the components as well as a complete system to be used in POC applications.

There are some common characteristics of a POC device, a few of which are listed below [ibid]:

1) Low Power Consumption

2) Low Cost

3) Ability to function at high humidity levels typical of tropical countries.

4) No storage requirements for cartridges/reagents

5) Long Shelf Life for the reagents

6) Portability and ruggedness

7) Minimal training requirements

8) Plug-and-play nature for use with different

The WHO has started encouraging Diagnostics manufacturers to explore modularity. Their intent

is to come up with standards to make cartridges from different vendors interoperable with other

diagnostic platforms. During the recent conference held in Geneva [1], the participants discussed

the plug and play nature of consumer electronics made possible because of standardized

interfaces. Achieving such standards for diagnostics would open up platforms and allow

companies to collaborate seamlessly. Dr. Powers from the International Standards Organization

(ISO) suggested that the interoperability model developed would contain the following three

modules: a) a medical information bus device with a basic instrument supplied by power, b)

unique elements of the assay incorporated in a disposable reagent-filled cartridge and c)

Technology-specific interconnectors that connect the cartridges to the instrument

Page 27: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

7

Other benefits include the ability of one reader to be used with multiple cartridges from different

suppliers allowing only relevant tests to be stocked; reduced training for technicians; easy

understanding of the technology and adoption by new diagnostic companies fuelling innovation

and finally the rapid development of unforeseen technologies similar to what occurred after the

adoption of USB standards.

Since the emerging markets are more likely to invest smaller amounts regularly over long

periods instead of large upfront costs, the diagnostic companies with business models relying on

plug and play cartridges will experience higher sales and hence have an incentive to adopt

common standards[ibid]. With a population of 4.5 billion in LMICs, diagnostic firms would find

it increasingly hard to ignore such a large market. In addition, the possibility of increased market

share exists for industrial participants who develop the technology and make it freely available.

For example [3], after Adobe Systems bequeathed their PDF standard to ISO, PDF became a

brand name and standard for document management and counter-intuitively Adobe increased

their market share

The commercial development of POC devices is aimed at not only emerging markets but also

advanced economies. Europe and North America are bound to see a rapid growth in demand for

POC applications in assisted living centers due to ageing populations. The POC market in the US

alone was worth 14 billion dollars in 2014 [4]. All of these suggests that the development of

interoperable POC devices will be the focus of many diagnostics firms.

2.2 Advantages of POC

Current diagnostic tests can take up to 36 hours to recognize bacterial infections due to the time

it takes to culture the strains [5]. This lengthy diagnoses time pressures doctors to prescribe

antibiotics. However if the illness is due to a viral infection, the treatment is ineffective and

counterproductive as the prescribed antibiotics may cause other bacteria in the patient’s body to

develop resistance. This has prompted concern among several developed nations. The British

Government constituted a task force to combat the overuse of antibiotics. This task force

identified several issues including the observation that Drug companies have no incentives to

develop rapid diagnostics, as it would undercut the sale of antibiotics.

Page 28: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

8

It is estimated that a 30% reduction in the effectiveness of antibiotics will cause 120,000 new

infections and 6000 deaths in the US every year [6]. To avoid such scenarios, rapid diagnosis is

necessary. There are several markers in the patient’s blood that can be an effective indicator of a

bacterial infection, most notably C - reactive protein. Countries like Netherlands, where

healthcare systems place an emphasis on CRP testing, also have the lowest rates of antibiotic

prescription.

In many countries, due to the nature of the healthcare system, several ailments are categorized as

non-emergencies and the patients are sent home [7]. In the ensuing days or weeks, it is possible

the problems may have worsened and require treatment that is more thorough. The Medical

profession is of the opinion that this a waste of resources and can be rectified by faster diagnosis

[8].

Currently when patients see a doctor or physician, they are prescribed medicines based on what

information they provide and physician’s knowledge and understanding of that information [9].

If a course of treatment does not work in the first instance, then the doctor prescribes more or a

combination of several medicines. This hit-and-miss approach often fails and can be eliminated

if there is a faster way of diagnosing the relevant condition. With the right diagnosis, the doctor

can prescribe treatment to actually attack the relevant medical condition rather than fight the

symptoms and hope it cures the disease. To address diagnostics to assist the doctor in the

prescription of antibiotics, a simple test for sepsis is needed. A proof-of-concept assay for

detecting sepsis using the C - reactive protein is presented in chapter 4.

The POC tests have to be rapid because faced with a choice of administering antibiotics right

away for a patient-suffering from fever and waiting hours to get results from a test, the

healthcare worker from LMICs are more likely to choose the former.

Companies like Stratos are already developing such rapid diagnostics [10]. This company

researched clinics in India, Latin America and Africa and came up with the PanDx concept. This

is a machine with multiple slots that can hold various tests. This allows the user to mix and

match different instruments with multiple cartridges allowing flexibility and modularity. A

breadboard like instrument has been designed so far that can accept cartridges for TB, HIV and

ALT assay from whole blood.

Page 29: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

9

Another example of interoperable products being developed is Global Solutions for Infectious

Diseases (GSID) platform [11]. This non-profit organization made use of already existing

products to develop new assays. The kit uses an Android phone operating as a wireless reader

with pre-existing diagnostics.

However, there are several issues to be overcome before plug and play systems are adapted by

consumers in LMICs. For example, a study [ibid] by GSID found out that 50% the people have

never used a touch screen device before. Additionally unlike electronics interoperability

standards that deal with primarily communication standards, POCT interoperability has to be

specific on the hardware technology of both the reader and the cartridge. Since most assays have

common processing steps such as sample preparation, mixing incubation, signal measurement,

etc, the cost of the cartridge will be dependent on how many of these steps are performed in it.

Therefore, an optimum tradeoff exists between cartridge complexity and cost.

Other advantages of modern POC devices include increased efficiency and simpler management

of medical records due to the wireless data transfer, reduced overcrowding in hospital waiting

rooms due to faster tests and allowing paramedics in emergency vehicles to know more about the

patient [12].

Modern POC devices like iStat [13] routinely use electronic data transferring using wireless

technologies increasing efficiency and simplifying the process for creating medical records.

Revue et al [14] analyzed data from POC usage in ambulances in Germany and found that iStat

devices were useful in quick diagnosis and treatment. Studies show that the Abbott i-STAT helps

clinicians to make quick, informed decisions. Dr. Jarvis [15] showed that usage of POC devices

in the Emergency Ward reduced the amount of time the patients spent by an average of 53

minutes which corresponds to more than 40% reduction. For these reasons, developing an

effective POC device and making them available to the wider health community is essential.

Page 30: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

10

2.3 Reason for POC blood tests

Samples from the patient could be blood, saliva, urine, sweat, etc. This section elaborates why

assay development aimed at diagnosing conditions through blood samples was chosen. Infectious

and non-communicable diseases result in premature and preventable deaths in the world, reduce

economic growth and limit human development [16]. Factors limiting an effective response

include:

1) Lack of access to diagnostic capacity in remote or rural settings in the Africa and Canada [17]

2) Lack of sufficient number of healthcare providers resulting in overburdened doctors’ offices,

clinics and hospitals [18] and

3) The lack of data available to health systems managers to make informed, evidence based

funding and policy decisions, leading to a disconnected, uncoordinated health system with poor

outcomes.

An easy to use portable diagnostic device that make early detection of a wide range of infectious

or non-communicable diseases will be very beneficial. Microfluidics, which uses smaller sample

volume, less reagents, inexpensive polymer, and low power consumption present the opportunity

to make this a reality [19]. Chapter 4 discusses a bead-based assay that is suitable for

microfluidic test requirements.

Complete Blood Count (CBC) is done in more than 50% of Emergency Room patients and is

done for a range of ailments. These typically give information about the RBC, WBC and platelet

counts [20]. These tests are performed using Flow Cytometers. However, these cumbersome

equipment are not portable or cost-efficient thus ruling them out for POC applications.

Affordable blood tests using small quantities of blood are becoming widespread due to

companies like Theranos [21]. The technology however is only available in specific locations

like pharmacies in the US. A more widely available and portable testing tool for POC

applications is needed. In Chapter 5, a lab prototype is built for counting CD4 cells within a few

minutes and is the first step towards a POC device being built by ChipCare Corp.

Page 31: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

11

2.4 Advantages of 3D Printers

The Deloitte white paper on 3D Printing explores the impact of Additive Manufacturing (AM) in

producing prototypes, models, visualization tools, tooling and end-user part production [22].

Popularly known as 3D Printing, this technology enables the production of objects through the

addition of materials instead of conventional manufacturing techniques relying on removal.

Deloittte estimates that this $2 billion industry is growing at an annualized 14.2 %.[23]

Additive Manufacturing helps distributed manufacturers as it reduces the minimum capital

requirements for them to achieve economies of scale in their supply chain [24]. Additionally,

lower capital is required to achieve a wider scope in their capabilities. This can change the

business model pursued by companies as illustrated in the graphic below:

Figure 2:2 Framework for

understanding 3D Printing

paths and values ([22]).

Various levels of adoption of

3D printing are seen in

businesses. Some businesses

tend to replace their entire

supply chain, while others

seek out 3D printing

capabilities only when rapid

prototyping or cost-effective

customization capability is

needed.

3D printing is increasingly

used in tooling for a broad range of applications in aerospace, automotive, defense and

healthcare for producing assembly jigs, fixtures and custom medical guides [25]. The available

materials are plastics, rubber, composites, metal and wax. Though the overall impact of 3D

Page 32: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

12

printing for tooling on overall supply chain is small, the advantages include a) lead time & b)

cost reduction, c) improved functionality and c) customizability

a) Lead time reduction: 3D Printing manufacturers advertise that their systems can reduced lead

times from 40 – 90 % [26]. This is due to several reasons: fewer labor inputs and machining

steps, usage of digital design files instead of paper drawings and lastly the ‘in-housing’ of

fabrication that was previously outsourced. The usage of digital design files is especially

important in eliminating the need for a technician to interpret the drawings. In addition, in

housing of the design process eliminates the risk of receiving improperly fabricated tools.

b) Cost Reduction: The costs associated with AM can be lower due to the higher product yield,

reduced labor and minimum scrap material generation. The reduced labor input is due to AM

being an automated process. Additionally, low volume production is especially economical with

AM as the existence of digital design files allows for rapid design changes eliminating expensive

up-front costs [27]. Additive manufacturing can result in substantial reduction in scrap material

due to the very nature of additive manufacturing.

c) Improved functionality: Previously unobtainable designs like complex geometries and free-

form shapes can be created. For example, Citizen (a manufacturer of watches) uses Additive

Manufacturing to create custom jigs for their watch assembly process [28]. They were able to

simplify operations by creating more types of tooling at a lower cost.

d) Customizability: Medical device and health care industries make use of user-specific

customization. Every year, about 50,000 patients are operated on using 3D Printed personalized

instruments and surgical guides [29]. The operating room efficiency and patient outcomes were

improved due to those tools. Dentistry is another medical field where customizability makes

significant difference to the end-user experience. The use of surgical implant guides specific to

the patient’s dental scan reduces surgery time and recovery process [ibid]. 3D printing is better

suited for such low-volume production.

Due to the above reasons, 3D Printing is more suited to keep up with changes in the product

design cycles at a lower cost than other manufacturing techniques. Hence, this technique is

explored in subsequent chapters for a variety of applications.

Page 33: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

13

2.5 3D Printers in Research

3D Printers are also increasingly being used in research to produce functional microfluidic

devices. The gradual shift towards 3D printing techniques is because lithography techniques are

expensive for small volume prototyping. 3D printers also allow previously unattainable complex

geometries to be readily created. In this section, a brief review of microfluidic and diagnostic

application developed by other researchers is presented.

Lego-like microfluidic parts were produced by Lee et al and Bhargava et al with the intention of

standardizing fluidic interconnects and components [27, 28]. They designed and characterized

fluidic channels, mixers, reactor chambers, gradient generators and inlet/outlets. Customizable

fluidic interconnects were produced by Paydar et al [29] and characterized for stability under

pressure. Their aim was to develop a reliable packaging technology for microfluidics.

Researchers have developed low-cost lateral flow assays [30] that can be prototyped in under 30

minutes. This has the potential to be adapted for containment of disease outbreaks. Lee et al [31]

created a millifluidic device that performs size-based separation of particular bacteria from other

clusters. They used the device to quantify E.coli from milk. Researchers have also utilized the

transparent nature of resin-based 3D printed parts to create customized 96-well plates [32]. With

the use of simple polishing techniques such as sanding, the surface of the finished material

became clear. This technique has the potential to be adopted in manufacturing disposable

cartridges for fluorescent detection for the assay developed in Chapter 4.

On a system level, researchers have developed a 3D printed fluorescence detection head [33] as

well as chemiluminescence biosensor for smartphone detection [34]. The customizability of the

parts enabled them to produce relatively complex designs for under $50 material cost as opposed

to more than $500 if they were machined. Similar cost advantages led to 3D printing being

adopted as a tool for designing a fluorescent detection kit as discussed in Chapter 5.

With the development of CAD designs suitable for 3D printing, microfluidic researchers will no

longer be restricted to producing their devices in expensive clean rooms. They will be able to

outsource their designs to be created elsewhere through 3D printing service companies [35]

Page 34: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

14

2.6 Comparison of commercial desktop 3D printers

This section lists the top 20 printers and their associated specifications [36]

Table 2-1 Comparison of some popular 3D printers (Reprinted with permission from ©

O’Neill et al [36] AIP Publishing). The Form1+ and the Zortrax were used in this thesis.

In this thesis, Form1+ and Zortrax M200 were explored. The latter was extensively used in the

later chapters. The Appendix includes good practices and techniques to achieve failure-free

printing.

Page 35: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

15

Chapter 3

Sample Preparation Module

3.1 Background

In this section, information about the composition of the blood is provided and literature on how

researchers have separated plasma from blood.

Whole blood contains nucleated White Blood Cells (WBC), non-nucleated Red Blood Cells

(RBC), Platelets and other molecules suspended in a fluid called Plasma [39]. The composition

of blood is illustrated below:

Figure 3:1 Blood Composition

(Reprinted with permission from

© M. Kersaudy-Kerhoas and E.

Sollier [39]) Red Blood Cells

(RBCs) and Plasma occupy

nearly occupy the entire volume

of blood. Plasma contains useful

biomarkers for different diseases

and needs separation from RBCs

to improve optical detection

performance.

In some flow cytometry applications involving WBC cell counting [40], whole blood is used

with RBCs lysed beforehand. This is to make sure that the data analysis software is not

overburdened with orders of magnitude higher numbers of RBCs. In other applications, where

Page 36: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

16

shorter sample preparation times are required (for example, ChipCare’s CD4 cell counter

discussed in more detail in chapter 5), the RBCs are not lysed. To ensure that the optical detector

picks up WBC cell population from among the higher numbers of RBCs, fluorescent particle

counting method is adopted. The subpopulations of the WBCs can be determined by mixing

monoclonal antibody reagents to whole blood. The fluorochrome-labelled antibodies bind only to

the specific antigen sites on the surface of the White Blood Cells. When excited with suitable

wavelengths, these labelled cells fluoresce and are picked up by the tracking software.

There are some applications [41] where fluorescent particle counting is needed for proteins in the

blood (which are much smaller than blood cells). Plasma contains many protein biomarkers as

indicated by Fig 3.1. For example, elevated amounts of Circulating Nucleic Acids (CNAs) can

be linked to cancer; sepsis could be identified by circulating C – reactive proteins, etc. The

advantage of using these kind of biomarkers for diagnosis is that they are cleared soon after the

associated condition is removed. Hence, there is lesser chance of false positives. In such

detection schemes, it becomes necessary to remove the interfering cells during the sample

preparation step. The separation of plasma is useful when the detection scheme relies on specific

proteins/antigens in the plasma to be used in bead-based assays [42]. This is achieved by filtering

blood. Some methods of isolating the plasma from whole blood found in literature are discussed

in the following sections.

Page 37: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

17

3.2 Methods of Blood Filtration

One of the common methods in clinical facilities to separate plasma is to use centrifugation [43].

However, commercial devices are expensive, bulky and require electricity, which makes them

unsuitable for many POC applications. Hence, the authors [44] developed a hand-powered

centrifuge based on an eggbeater that could achieve near 100% purity for plasma separation.

Users would then extract the supernatant manually after centrifugation through visual inspection.

However, the system is prone to human errors in handling during the final extraction phase.

For direct integration with a microfluidic channel, a different setup is needed. Researchers [45]

had developed a filtration method consisting of beads packed at the channel inlet. However, this

device is more difficult to manufacture due to vacuum requirements for packing the beads in the

channel. Using Lithographic methods, researchers have created micro posts [46] that can direct

flow causing size-based separation of cells. However, prototyping posts with micron dimensions

are beyond the capabilities of current 3D printers. In this thesis, centrifugal-force based and filter

based separation methods were explored. The former is described in the next section.

3.3 Centrifugal-force based separation

The possibility of separating plasma from blood using 3D printed helixes/spirals is explored in

this section. Particles in a straight channel experience drag forces as well as two types of inertial

lift forces (wall and shear induced) [47]. The two lift forces acting in opposite directions cause

recirculation in a curved channel termed as Dean Forces. The flow patterns are as illustrated

below:

Figure 3:2 In helical/spiral channels, centrifugal forces cause recirculation patterns that

tend to concentrate particles within the vortices [47]

Page 38: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

18

The equations for designing a specific helical channel of radius of curvature, R, Length, LD and

Channel Dimensions, Dh is given by the following equations from [48]

Where ρ = fluid density; Uf = fluid velocity; R = radius of curvature; Dh = Hydraulic diameter of

the channel; ap = particle diameter; µ= Dynamic viscosity of the fluid; LM = Migration Length;

LD =Channel Length for Dean Migration;

Solving these equations by fixing the channel dimensions, radius of curvature and fluid velocity

will give the required length of the spiral/helical channels for focusing particles of diameter ap

Researchers have reported the use of centrifugal force for size-based separation of particles [48].

Their microfluidic separation spirals can be used for continuous separation of particles or where

a large volume is used. The inertial forces caused the particles to separate into distinct

streamlines. The above devices were utilized by researchers [49] to separate Circulating Cancer

Cells (CTCs) as well as for chemiluminescent detection of cardiac arrest markers

In the above applications, researchers solved the hydrodynamic equations listed above assuming

that the ratio of the particle diameter to the channel diameter was (ap / Dh ) >0.07. Particles

satisfying this will streamline to the inner side of the channels while smaller particles will be at

the outer streamline within the same channel. However, this condition could not be satisfied for

3D printed channels. Performing the calculation for typical human cells by modelling them as

spheres, it was found that the channel widths required to separate 5 um cells from smaller

particles would be 70 µm. This turns out to be an order of magnitude smaller than what desktop

3D Printers can reliably create. Hence, this suggests that the separation of blood cells from

plasma would not be theoretically possible. Numerical simulations were attempted in COMSOL

Multiphysics (parameters are described in Appendix B) to check if channel dimensions could be

found for plasma separation without satisfying (ap / Dh ) >0.07.

Page 39: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

19

In an attempt to understand the flow dynamics associated with particles in a fluid, simulations

were performed. In COMSOL Multiphysics, a model was built with two Physics: Laminar Flow

and Particle Tracing for Fluid Flow. The continuous phase modelled by the Laminar Flow profile

was solved first by using the Stationary Study option. This was followed by the dispersed phase

modelled by the time dependent Particle Tracing for Fluid Flow Module. The two simulations

were decoupled to reduce the computational requirements.

The Particle Tracing model in COMSOL Multiphysics can model particles whose impact on the

fluid flow is negligible. Due to the difference in velocity between the particle and the fluid, the

fluid exerts a drag force.

The Freeze option was used at the Outlet to recover the particles’ velocity profile and positions.

The Bounce parameter for the particles was selected so that everywhere within the channel,

elastic collisions between the wall and the particle would occur.

A flow model for a straight rectangular channel with a single inlet and outlet was initially

developed with the above parameters. The geometry is given below:

Figure 3:3 Geometry of a straight channel developed in COMSOL Multiphysics. The

channel was 20 mm long and had a uniform rectangular cross-sectional area of 2 mm x 2

mm.

Page 40: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

20

This rectangular channel was simulated to show the effects of flow. The figure below shows the

velocity profile for a straight channel.

Figure 3:4 A) (Uniform) Velocity Profile at the inlet of a straight channel (0.05 m/s) and B)

(Parabolic) Fluid velocity profile at the output of the straight channel. The simulation

illustrates the effects of solving a 3-dimensional fluidic equation.

The above simulations confirmed that the parameters were correctly set for obtaining the flow

velocity. Subsequently, the particle tracing capability was added to the model and a time

dependent simulation was performed. The results are shown below:

Page 41: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

21

Figure 3:5 Time lapse snapshots of particles at t=0 s and 0.1 s. In A) the particles were

uniformly distributed to the inlet boundary condition and had the same velocity of 0.05

m/s. In B) The particles had traversed 5 mm along the channel and they had a non-uniform

velocity profile as indicated by the darker red colors in the middle and (slower) blue

colored dots in the periphery Focusing of particles as they traverse the length of the

channel was observed.

As expected, the parabolic velocity profile observed previously caused the particles to become

focused as they travelled along the channel. The effects of gravity on this flow can be seen in the

next simulation result.

Page 42: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

22

Figure 3:6 Effects of the particle diameter on the flow trajectories. A) 10 um particle

trajectories and B) 100 µm particle trajectories. Larger particles (100 um) were seen to be

significantly affected by gravity compared to the smaller 10 um particles.

Though hydrodynamic focusing does take place within straight channels, the manufacturing

requirements for extracting the output limits the utility of such devices. So, helical channels were

next explored.

Page 43: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

23

The above models were extended to a helical geometry. A helix with 2 mm x 2 mm channel

dimensions was created in Solidworks and imported to COMSOL using the LiveLink Feature.

The dimensions were chosen so that 3D printing could be potentially be adopted to prototype

these cell separation devices.

Figure 3:7 A 2-loop helix with 2 mm x 2mm channel dimensions, 20 mm helix diameter and

20 mm pitch. (All shown dimensions in the graph are in millimeters). The outlet was

geometrically split into two equal sections to observe the effects of particle separation. The

helix was drawn in Solidworks.

Page 44: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

24

Then, simulations were performed as before to characterize the flow velocity first. The results

are shown below:

Figure 3:8 Velocity profile at the output of the 2-loop helix. Higher velocity of the fluid was

noticed at the outer edges of the channel compared to the inner side. This is shown by the

darker red regions towards the left side of the output face.

The curved channels caused a different velocity profile at the output compared to the straight

channels. As noticed from Figure 3:8 B), the velocity was higher at the outer outlets, similar to

predictions illustrated previously in Fig 3:2. This was confirmed by performing particle

trajectory simulations and the results are illustrated below:

Figure 3:9 Snapshots of particle trajectories at A) t=0 s, and B) t=0.2 s when particles reach

the outlet. As noticed from B), the particles were more concentrated at the (outer) wall of

the channel denoted by Outlet 1. It was also observed that there were particles, which

never reached the output irrespective of how long the simulations were run for. They are

seen in B) as blue particles trailing in the channel.

Page 45: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

25

From the above simulation graphs, it was observed that there was an increased spatial

distribution at the outer wall of the channel (Outlet 1). To characterize the separation efficiency

of this model, it was necessary to count the number of particles reaching the outlet. However, it

was noticed that a significant number of particles did not reach the outlet. This was possibly due

to meshing inefficiencies or simulation time steps being not precise enough. The transmission

probability was ~40%. To account for just the particles reaching the outlets and splitting into

Outlet 1 and Outlet 2, an Enrichment Factor was defined as

Enrichment Factor = 𝑁𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟 𝑜𝑓 𝑃𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑖𝑐𝑙𝑒𝑠 𝑖𝑛 𝑂𝑢𝑡𝑙𝑒𝑡 1

𝑁𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟 𝑜𝑓 𝑃𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑖𝑐𝑙𝑒𝑠 𝑖𝑛 𝑂𝑢𝑡𝑙𝑒𝑡 2

Based on this factor, graphs were plotted to see the effect of number of particles injected into the

helix on the separation efficiency. For 100% separation into Outlet 1, the Enrichment Factor

would be infinity. Simulations were performed on 100, 1000 and 10000 particles.

Figure 3:10 Excel graph of enrichment factor for different diameters and particle numbers.

The data suggests that the number of particles at the inlet does not have a significant effect

on the enrichment factor. It stays constant at ~1.30. This would be imply that the Outlet 1

has 30% more particles than Outlet 2. This would be ideal for blood cell separation because

the number of cells would be different for different patients.

0.75

0.9

1.05

1.2

1.35

1.5

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000

Enri

chm

ent

Fact

or

Number of 1 um particles

Enrichment Factor vs Number of 1 um particles

Page 46: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

26

The influence of the particle diameter on the spatial distribution at the outlet was simulated next.

Figure 3:11 The particle diameter’s influence on the Enrichment Factor. A rising trend was

seen. Theoretically, infinite Enrichment Factor (100% separation into the Outlet 1) would

be seen for particles diameter larger than 0.140 mm.

The enrichment factor increased with increasing diameter, but simultaneously the overall

transmission decreased due to the particles stopping midflow due to reasons possibly associated

with meshing or simulation time steps.

Theoretically, the particles should tend to separate at 𝑝𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑖𝑐𝑙𝑒 𝑑𝑖𝑎𝑚𝑒𝑡𝑒𝑟

𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑛𝑒𝑙 𝑑𝑖𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛 > 0.07 but there was

no way to verify this as the particles never reached the outlet.

To make sure all the particles reach the output, a deeper understanding of the underlying

algorithms used by COMSOL will be needed. To guide future research in this area, the

simulation time was plotted against the number of particles to give a better understand how the

algorithm handles complexity,

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Enri

chm

ent

Fact

or

Particle Diameter in um

Enrichment Factor vs Particle Diameter

Page 47: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

27

Figure 3:12 The solution time dependency on the number of (1 µm) particles. Orders of

magnitude increase results in less than a linear increase in the time taken to complete the

simulation.

Further optimization for obtaining channel dimensions appropriate for blood plasma separation

was not performed for the following reasons: Particle Tracing in COMSOL would not be a valid

model for blood cells. This is because COMSOL the models assume the dispersed phase (cells)

are less than 1% of the continuous phase. This is not the case with Red Blood Cells because they

occupy nearly as much volume as blood plasma. Moreover, the volumes of fluid needed to

achieve separation at the output would be ~ 1 mL. For the above reasons, the centrifugal force-

based separation of plasma from whole blood through 3D printing was not pursued. Instead a

membrane filter-based approach was undertaken.

y = -2E-06x2 + 0.0449x + 187.13

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000

Sim

ula

tio

n t

ime

(s)

Number of Particles

Simulation time vs number of particles

Page 48: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

28

3.4 Filter Membrane-based separation

An alternative simpler approach would be to use a filter membrane. The authors [51,52] use a

membrane filter to separate plasma from blood cells. They also performed biochemistry tests

where they showed that membrane based filters have low enough adsorption to allow for

downstream disease detection. However, their device was optimized for use with ~1 ml of whole

blood. The fact that a large quantity of blood is required for flow limits the utility of their design

to venous-type blood draws. For many POC devices (discussed in chapter 5), a finger-prick

quantity of blood is sufficient for analysis.

In this section, a proof-of-concept device is presented that is useful for separating plasma from

finger-prick volumes (25 µl) of blood. A similar membrane filter-based approach was adopted in

this thesis but with 3D printed parts as explained in this section.

Filter Selection: Filters can be either Depth or Membrane Filters depending on the underlying

filtration mechanism [53]. Depth filters have a matrix of randomly oriented fibers that can

prevent particles from passing through. They have a higher dirt-holding capacity. However, they

also tend to shed possibly causing contamination in high throughput samples. On the other hand,

membrane filters have a network of pores on their surface, which stop particles bigger than the

pore diameter. They are good for tests requiring higher integrity of the filtrate. For this reason,

membrane filters were chosen over Depth filters.

Extractable are contaminants that may leach from a filtration system to the filtrate. Polyester

Track Etch (PETE) filter have low extractables meaning no extraneous substances will be added

by the filter to the filtrate (eg: manufacturing debris, sterilization residue, adhesives, etc) [54].

This is essential for biological applications as certain contaminants can kill cells by inducing

cytotoxicity. The filter is also thermally stable upto 140o C and has a pH range of 4-8 which is

sufficient for blood filtration done in this thesis.

For the above reasons, the membrane that was used for filtration was PETE polyester membrane

(2.0 µm pore size, 25 mm in diameter) from Sterlitech Corporation [55]. The material has low

non-specific absorption. It has a smooth surface thereby reducing the chance of hemolysis. Other

useful properties include its resistance against a wide range of chemicals, minimum auto

fluorescence and low moisture absorption [56].

Page 49: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

29

3.5 Plasma Extraction Experiment

The key idea was to have capillary channels beneath the filter paper, as gravity was observe to

be not sufficient to let the droplets seep through the filter. Various capillary channel dimensions

were tried on a 3D printed platform and it was observed that smaller the capillary channels (the

spacing between the walls as well as the capillary wall thickness), the shorter the filtration time.

However, desktop 3D printers (Form1+ and the Zortrax M200) have a limitation of 0.5 mm wall

thickness and 1 mm wall spacing. Hence, these dimensions were chosen for the capillaries and

manufactured. The Solidworks drawing is attached in Appendix A.

This module initially consisted of a single 3D printed piece with capillary channels with a

collection port in the middle as shown below:

Figure 3:13 Design 1 for the filtration module. The capillary channels of 0.5 mm heights

and widths are seen as horizontal stripes in the middle. The hole in the center leads to a

collection well. Note that the filter membrane was transparent and covers an area sli

Immuno-trol™ cell [57] samples were used instead of real blood to minimize biohazard risk and

comply with lab regulations. They were mixed with fluorescent Spherotech [58] beads of

diameter 3.42 µm to allow the use of fluorescent microscopes. Those beads were diluted 10x and

10 µl of this solution and added to 90 µl of Immunotrol blood to achieve fluorescent bead

concentrations around 1000/µl. These numbers were chosen to be close to the average number of

WBCs in the human blood.

24 µl of this Immunotrol + bead mixture was taken and pipetted into the sample preparation

module. After a few minutes, it was seen that the capillary channels were full and the filter

Page 50: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

30

membrane was carefully removed from the filter holder. The plasma was extracted from the

capillary channels using a pipette and analyzed under a fluorescent microscope. However, when

the experiment was performed, it was noted that the filter membrane would sometimes have an

air gap. This would cause the blood drop on the top to roll off to the side and contaminate the

plasma extracted by the capillary channels. The results are shown below

Figure 3:14 Fluorescent images of A) beads present in the whole blood before filtration and

b) after filtration in the extracted plasma from capillary channels. The presence of beads in

B) indicate the failure of the filtration process through leakage of the whole

Design 2: The sample prep module had six equally spaced holes at the top for even distribution

of the pipetted blood as well as a circular rim to clamp the filter membrane to prevent leakage

issues. Similar experiment was performed using the second design. The plasma was extracted

from the capillary channels using a pipette and analyzed under a fluorescent microscope. As

expected, no fluorescent beads were visible indicating that this filter module restricts passage of

particles 3 µm or higher.

Page 51: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

31

Figure 3:15 A) Blood droplets in the six equally spaced inlets on the clamp part for uniform

distribution of the blood and right B) After filtration picture with the clamp removed. The

presence of the clamp secured the membrane filter and reduced the air gap. Thus, plasma

was seen to be more widely dispersed throughout compared to the previous filter design.

The Solidworks drawing files are listed in Appendix A.

Figure 3:16 Fluorescent images of a) remnants of blood on top of the filter and b) extracted

plasma from the capillaries. The second design with the clamp on top of the membrane

filter prevented leakage and hence no fluorescent beads were seen.

As shown in the above pictures, the filtration is a 2-step process requiring the use of 3D Printed

Holder containing the capillaries as well as a commercial filter paper with appropriate pore sizes.

Here the application was to filter blood cells and therefore 2 µm would be sufficient to remove

the smallest cells.

This is useful for a significant number of biochemistry applications where ultrapure samples of

plasma are needed for example in quantification of C-Reactive Proteins (Chapter 4).

Page 52: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

32

Chapter 4

Bead-based Assay Module

4.1 Sepsis Literature Review

Sepsis is a range of symptoms caused by the host response to infection. A reliable indicator of

Sepsis is the C - reactive protein (CRP) present in the blood plasma. The biochemistry of an

existing bead-based assay from the literature will be adapted to make it suitable for disposable

microfluidics. A brief review of sepsis and its diagnosis in clinical settings is described below:

The Society of Critical Care Medicine Conference proposed the definitions of Sepsis, Systematic

Inflammatory Response Syndrome and Multiple Organ Dysfunction in 1991 [59]. A severity

index was developed during the conference to deal with septic patients to assess their mortality.

The systemic response to an infection was termed as Sepsis and is the most common cause of

ICU deaths. On the other hand, Systemic Inflammatory Response is a generalized inflammatory

response whose cause may not necessarily be an infection. The figure below illustrates the

various definitions:

Page 53: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

33

Figure 4:1 Classification of Inflammatory response ([59]). Sepsis is diagnosed when both

infectious agent and inflammation is present in the patient. The cause of this infection

could be bacteria, fungus, virus, etc and they are denoted by circles indicating the relative

frequency at which they occur. Similarly, inflammation could be because of trauma, burns,

pancreatitis or other causes.

If the Systemic Response is characterized by 2 or more of the following symptoms, then it can be

classified as Sepsis: a) Temperature >38o C or < 36o C, b) heart rate > 90 beats/minute c)

Respiratory rates > 20 breaths/ minute d) WBC count > 12000/mm3 or <4000/ mm3.

The presence of viable bacteria in the blood is termed as Bacteremia. Multiple Organ

Dysfunction is the presence of altered organ function in an acutely ill patient whose homeostasis

cannot be maintained without intervention. Any infection can lead to a response from the body

with a continuum of severity possibly leading all the way to mortality.

More than 30,000 patients are hospitalized for sepsis every year in Canada and about a third of

them die [60]. Even the patients who survive end up spending a lot of time in the Intensive Care

Unit (ICU) resulting in high personal and economic costs. The median hospital stay was 12 days,

more than a week longer than for other diseases. Among patients with severe sepsis, organ

dysfunction results with the respiratory system most commonly affected. Patients for whom

Page 54: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

34

sepsis was diagnosed had lower odds of dying compared with patients for whom sepsis was not

identified in the Emergency Department.

Due to the above reasons, considering the severity of the infectious process will allow the

healthcare professional to make an informed choice on the allocation of resources and in making

better clinical decisions. Since the symptoms of Sepsis are numerous, several scoring systems

have been developed [61]. A common method will be to evaluate the observed physiological

response of the patient. For example, the Organ-specific scoring system like the Glasgow Coma

Scale (GCS) or general ICU scales (Logistic Organ Failure Score LODS, Multiple Organ Failure

Score MODS, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment SOFA) like the APACHE are highly

dependent on the quality of the input. The Organ Dysfunction scores assess only degree of organ

malfunction. The data collection rules must match exactly those stipulated by the model.

Moreover, the observer reliability must also be taken into account. In addition, many of the

equations underlying the models rely on the limited populations of ICU patients available. And

finally, the use of other measures introduces a bias into the predictive equations.

Given the multitude of non-quantitative options discussed above to diagnose sepsis, there is a

necessity for a more specific test for sepsis. This is achieved through biomarkers [62].

Biomarkers are defined as a ‘characteristic that is objectively measured and evaluated as an

indicator of normal biologic process’. The usefulness of biomarkers are indicated by their

Diagnostic Accuracy (DA). This is characterized by high values of Sensitivity, Specificity,

Positive Predictive Value (PPV), Negative Predictive Value (NPV), Positive Likelihood Ratio

(PLR) and Negative Likelihood Value (NLR). Their definitions are given in the table below:

Page 55: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

35

Table 4-1 Definitions of Diagnostic Accuracy of Biomarker (Courtesy [59])

C - reactive protein is one of the most common biomarkers [63] used as the concentration can

increase 1000-fold after infection. As seen from Table below, CRP has favorable detection range

encompassing nearly 2 orders of magnitude allowing the most common bacterial and fungal

infections to be identified. Therefore, CRP was selected as the Sepsis marker in this thesis.

Additionally depending on the commercial test used, the DA values can be close to the ideal

100%. The lower ranges in some of the tests are due to the different population characteristics

like age which influence the cutoff values.

Table 4-2 Diagnostic Accuracy (DA) Values of C-Reactive Protein, Procalcitonin, Serum

Amyloid A, Mannan and Antimannan and IFN-γ -inducible Protein Biomarkers

(Reprinted with permission from © 2011 Taylor & Francis [62])

Researchers have found that levels below 100 mg/L are indicative of fungal infection while

above 100 mg/L occur for bacterial infection as shown in Figure.

Page 56: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

36

Figure 4:2 Thresholds of different markers for distinguishing infectious pathogens in blood

(Reprinted with permission from © 2011 Taylor & Francis [62]). The bacterial cause of

Sepsis is marked by a high value of CRP beyond 100 mg/l of blood. In contrast, viral causes

of Sepsis are marked by elevated levels of CRP but they tend to stay below 10 mg/l. Both

regimes of CRP levels are quantified using a bead-based assay in section 4.6

The above table summarizes other sepsis biomarkers as well as thresholds used clinically to

categorize the cause of infection into bacterial, fungal or viral.

The fastest test among the commercial systems is Alere’s Nyocard (3 minutes read time) [ibid].

However, the measuring device is restricted to sequential testing of proteins, multiplexing ability

does not exist. A diagnostic system with minimum sample preparation and parallel testing of

multiple proteins is needed. This is because no single marker has been deemed sufficient to

reliably identify/rule out infection.

Page 57: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

37

Table 4-3 Commercial CRP detecting systems (Reprinted with permission from © 2011

Taylor & Francis [62]) All Assays except the last two, use either plasma or serum instead of

whole blood to quantify CRP.

Hence, an attempt will be made in this thesis to develop an assay that is amenable to

multiplexing. In later sections of this chapter, a bead-based assay for detecting CRP is presented

that has the potential to be extended for multiplexed protein assays.

Page 58: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

38

4.2 Bead-based Assay Review

In this section, a commercial multiplexed protein test is reviewed to illustrate the general steps

involved. Proteins can be detected using sandwich detection schemes like Enzyme Linked

Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA). Benect Dickson (BD) [64] has an assay kit consisting of a Bead

Array that allows flow cytometric users to quantify several proteins in parallel. This method is

suitable for microfluidic applications due to the significantly reduced sample volumes and time

compared to ELISA and Western Blot tests. This is achieved by the use of beads, which have a

different but unique fluorescent intensity, and on whose surface are coated antibodies capable of

capturing specific analytes.

The BD CBA Flex set is capable of analyzing up to 30 proteins from a sample size as small as 25

µL. ELISA and Western Blot require similar volumes for just a single protein. The pictorial

representation of the assay is given below:

Figure 4:3 BD CBA test with 5 unique (A-E) beads having different fluorescent intensity

([64]). In commercial bead-based assays, the beads have a unique color as well as a unique

capture antibody on their surface. This allows multiplexed sample diagnostics

Page 59: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

39

The beads are initially unconjugated allowing antibodies to be attached through sulfo-SMCC

chemistry as shown below:

Figure 4:4 Antibody conjugation of the BD’s CBA set using sulfo-SMCC chemistry ([64]).

The conjugation of capture antibodies is performed using chemical bonding techniques.

However, later in this chapter, a technique for attaching antibodies through passive

adsorption is demonstrated.

Once the conjugation is done, the sample containing the analytes of interest is added. Then

detection antibodies conjugated with a different fluorophore are added to form a sandwich with

the analytical protein in the middle. All beads are then excited with 2 lasers (488 nm or 532 nm

and 633 nm). The beads have different emission intensities allowing a qualitative yes/no test for

the protein. The fluorophore attached to the detection antibody will then give a quantitative

reading for each protein. In the absence of the targeted antigen on the surface of the bead, the

bead will still fluoresce when excited by red laser but there will not be any signal when the

second laser (532 nm) is shone due to the absence of the detection antibody. The detection

algorithm picks up this absence.

Researchers [65,66] have used CRP for detecting upper respiratory tract infections in addition to

sepsis on a bead-based platform. The Christodoulides et al used Agarose beads to capture the

CRP antigen in human saliva in patients with dental inflammation. The beads were porous and

presented a larger surface area for the immobilization of capture antibodies than possible in

ELISA. They coupled the Antibodies onto the bead using reductive amination. Their results

Page 60: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

40

indicate that fluorescence detection was more sensitive to the colorimetric detection. The epi-

fluorescent setup allowed the signal coming from the entire Agarose bead to be sensed. Kulla et

al [66] developed a similar assay using the CRP biomarker to detect children who are at a risk of

death from malnutrition. In both the applications. The beads were positioned in microfluidic

channels in the path of the free flowing analytes. Microtainers hold the beads in place while the

fluid flows through them and around them. Agarose beads have diameters under 400 µm, which

makes them less amenable to be used in 3D Printed wells. Therefore, larger beads were

necessary to perform the bead-based assay for which 1/16” Nylon beads were chosen in this

thesis as described in the following section. The beads are well adapted for integration into a

disposable cartridge. Only the biochemistry part of the test will be on the disposable chips. This

allows for potential interoperability with fluorescent optical detection kits from several vendors

in the future as previously discussed in Chapter 2.

Page 61: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

41

4.3 Assay Development

To enable the protein assay to be performed on a 3D printed platform, it was necessary to find

suitable beads. Polysciences had large (1/16”) polyamide nylon 6/6 beads [67], which were large

enough to not be washed away during the washing step.

This eliminated the need for external magnetic force generators to immobilize the beads. Before

the 3D Printed well can be used to hold the beads, it was necessary to first develop a reliable

assay protocol using beads incubated in plastic vials. The following sub-topics outline how the

assay was systematically developed to realize an Antigen detection module.

i) Choice of bead material: Nylon beads were chosen because they perform well even under a

chemically aggressive environment [68]. They are insoluble in most organic and diluted

inorganic acids, resistant to alkalis and have a glass transition temperature of 50o C. They are

also readily available in all sizes and forms with worldwide production being 3.4 million tons

[69]. They do not float on water due to their density of 1.19 g/cc making them ideal for fluidic

applications. Beads with lower density would have required external magnetic fields to hold

them in place. Nylon absorbs moisture better than other polymers.

ii) Choice of Blocking Agent: One of the critical steps in most assays is the addition of the

blocking agent after the addition of the antigen [70]. Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay

(ELISA) is a common solid phase immunoassay where biomolecules of interest are selectively

captured on the surface of the bead. Non-Specific Binding (NSB) of other proteins during

subsequent steps can occur on the unoccupied spaces. To prevent this, these unoccupied sites are

saturated with a blocking agent. An ideal blocking agent does not take part in the assay reaction

while simultaneously preventing other NSB [71].

There are two major classes of blocking reagents: proteins and detergents. A good blocking

agent will

1) Prevent Non-specific binding on the unoccupied sites

2) Not exhibit cross-reactivity with biomolecules in subsequent steps

3) Not interfere with the existing binding of the antigen

Page 62: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

42

4) Stabilize the existing antigen-bead bonds and prevent denaturation

Bovine Serum Albumin is a commonly used protein blocker. It is a permanent blocker and hence

only needed to be added once. The typical concentrations used is 1 to 3%. BSA of concentration

(50 mg/ml) from Invitrogen was purchases and diluted 2x with Phosphate Buffer Saline (PBS) to

achieve the necessary concentration required for stable blocking.

iii) Choice of Reporter fluorophore: The physical phenomenon where light is absorbed by a

material and subsequently re-emitted is termed as fluorescence [72]. There is a negligible time

delay (microseconds) between the absorption and the emission processes. Fluorescence emission

will always be at a longer wavelength compared to the absorption wavelength. A fluorochrome

is a substance that has a well-defined absorption and emission spectra whose light output is

available at useful intensities. They are highly specific and have a high quantum yield. This

fluorochrome when attached to a binding antibody is termed as fluorophore

Figure 4:5 Fluorescence Emission process flow ([73]) Absorption of a suitable photon

causes the electron to jump from the ground state to an excited state. The decay is usually

instantaneous and is accompanied by the emission of longer wavelength light.

As shown in the figure above, fluorescence is a three-step process. During the excitation phase,

the fluorophore absorbs a photon from the light source and goes from the ground state to the

excited state S2. Then it decays rapidly to state S1. Finally, a photon with a lower energy is

Page 63: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

43

emitted as the fluorophore goes back to the ground state. To ensure easier optical filter

requirements, a good spectral separation between the excitation and emission spectra is

necessary. This implies a large Stokes shift. Therefore, dyes with a large Stokes shift are suitable

for easier fluorescent hardware detection requirements.

Phycoerythrin was chosen as the fluorophore in this thesis due to several reasons. The Molecular

Weight of R-Phycoerythrin is 240,000 Daltons [72]. They are classified under Phycobiliproteins,

which have high Quantum Yield. They are derived from cyanobacteria, which have high

absorbance and fluorescence without quenching. Therefore, Phycoerythrin has relatively high

fluorescent yield (comparable to 30 fluorescein or 100 rhodamine molecules). The excitation

spectrum of Phycoerythrin lends itself well to multiplexing with other fluorophore. For example,

a different cell population tagged with Alexa Fluor can be detected by having a filter at 520 nm

while simultaneously having another filter with a >575 nm pass band.

Figure 4:6 Absorption and Emission spectra of 3 Phycobiliproteins – R-Phycoerythrin

(RPE), B-Phycoerythrin (BPE) and Allophycocyanin (APC) ([72]). R-PE has a broad

absorption spectrum and a narrow emission spectrum centered close to 585 nm

Phycobiliproteins, R-PE was chosen in this thesis because of readily available conjugated

proteins (Streptavidin-PE, Biotin-PE and Goat IgG1-PE). The Quantum Yield of R-PE is 0.82.

Page 64: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

44

iv) Antibodies:

Antibodies have four polypeptide

chains. These glycoprotein molecules

are also known as Immunoglobulin

(Ig) [15]. The amino acid composition

of the terminal ends are diverse and

hence referred to as the variable (V)

regions. The total molecular weight of

each monomer Immunoglobulin

molecule is approximately 150,000

Daltons (made of two H chains of

50,000 each and two light chains of

25,000 each)

There are two binding sites in each

monomer where the variable regions

occur and can be tailored to be

specific to an antigen. The neck of the V-region is called the hinge region and is held together by

Disulphide bonds. There are five types of Immunoglobulin – IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG and IgM. The

differences arising from the polypeptide regions of the Fc chain.

Immunoglobulin Gamma (IgG) is the most common antibody found in the human serum

constituting nearly 75% of the total Ig. Hence, it is the predominant version used in clinical

diagnostics. Antibodies can be further classified as monoclonal or polyclonal depending on their

specificity to a region on the antigen. Monoclonal antibodies are specific to a single epitope on

the antigen and work well as primary antibody. Polyclonal antibodies on the other hand are better

suited for use as secondary antibodies due to their abilities to target multiple epitope sites on the

antigen. In this assay, monoclonal antibodies were used when specific capture was necessary and

polyclonal antibodies were used for the reporter fluorophore.

Figure 4:7 Antibody structure showing the Heavy

chains and the Light chains (Courtesy [74])

Page 65: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

45

4.4 Adsorption on bead surface

Literature [75] exists on protein adsorption on polystyrene beads where the authors noted that the

biological activity is greater for the adsorbed antibodies as opposed to covalently linked

antibodies. This was because the sites on the protein molecule for covalent binding were the

same as those meant for antigen binding. Additionally, those studies also indicated that the

adsorbed protein was stable under dilution and would only be desorbed if a competing protein

with a higher binding energy existed. However, it was found that research on protein adsorption

on polyamide beads used in this thesis was lacking. Therefore, an empirical approach was used

to determine the quantities required for binding.

Guideline amounts of the required protein to form a monolayer was given in the supplier

(Bangslab) literature. Adsorption is through hydrophobic attractions (Van der waals) between the

polybead’s surface and the hydrophobic parts of the protein. The Fc (stem) portion of the

antibody is more hydrophobic and hence attaches more readily than the Fab region. This is ideal

as the biologically active Fab region is exposed and will not be physically hindered. To make

sure that the protein is oriented the right way, an excess amount is recommended to be added

[76]. The base amount needed for a monolayer is given by

S= (C)(6/Dρ)

S = Protein amount for surface saturation; C = Microsphere surface capacity

D = Diameter of beads; ρ = Density of beads

Data already exists [76] on concentration needed for bovine IgG. About 15 mg of Bovine IgG is

needed for 1 g of 1 µm of beads. The density of the polyamide beads is 1.19 g/cc and the

diameter is 1.5875 mm. This corresponds to 8 µg of protein for coating the surface of 1 g of the

bead. Since each bead weighs 2.5 mg, the quantity of protein on the monolayer is 20 ng. Due to

limitations in the amount of reagents available, the amount of protein added in the first

adsorption step was approximately 10x lower.

Researchers [77] have previously investigated the effects of applying an electric field to speed up

the adsorption kinetics. They used a conducting layer on an optical waveguide as the substrate

for protein adsorption. They have found that applying an electric voltage caused a significant

Page 66: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

46

increase in adsorption on the conductive layer. Electrostatic attraction between the charged

adsorbent surface and the oppositely charged amino acid favored adsorption.

While this method is suitable for detecting the adsorbed proteins through a direct method such as

through refractive index change or spectroscopic based detection methods, it will not be suitable

for indirect methods such as fluorescence detection.

The functional surfaces of the protein might be de-activated by the change in pH caused by the

application of the electric field. This can lower the antibody binding in subsequent steps making

it more difficult to get a fluorescent signal.

Also improper voltage levels could potentially cause hydrogen bubbles from the electrolysis of

water, that can compete with the protein adsorption on the bead surface. Eliminating the bubbles

would require optimizing the electrical resistance of the buffer solution.

Finally, inclusion of extra electrodes would be disadvantageous to the compactness of the bead-

based assay for POC applications. For these reasons, simple adsorption without any recourse to

electrical voltage has been attempted in this thesis.

Page 67: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

47

4.5 Streptavidin-Biotin Assay

A) Qualitative Assay: The aim was to develop a qualitative assay to detect the presence or

absence of an antigen. To characterize the applicability of beads to detect fluorescence, a test

protocol was developed to detect Streptavidin [78] through the use of the fluorescently labelled

Biotin [79].

The primary aim of using large beads for a bead-based assay is that they can be immobilized in a

3D printed channel as shown below

Figure 4:8 Large (1.5 mm diameter) Nylon beads can be trapped in 3D printed fluidic

channels within a disposable cartridge.

The first step was to develop the assay on a general protein. Streptavidin was chosen as the

antigen of choice due to its strong binding kinetics with Biotin. Streptavidin is a large molecule

and has a Molecular Weight of 60,000 g/mole. An assay was developed as follows: A known

amount of Streptavidin was added to the beads. The incubation was overnight followed by the

addition of blocking agent BSA for another 24 hours. After thorough rinsing, the detection

antibody was added (Biotin conjugated with Phycoerythrin). This was flushed before imaging

under a fluorescent microscope having a mercury vapor lamp source fitted with a 530 nm

Excitation filter and the 585 nm Emission wavelength filter. The steps are included in Appendix

C: Table 1. The results are shown below:

Page 68: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

48

The vertical axis the made of arbitrary

intensity units when analyzed by ImageJ.

As expected, the bead with Streptavidin

coating fluoresced with higher intensity

than the Control bead, indicating that

successful adsorption of Streptavidin had

taken place on the surface of the bead.

As seen from the bar graphs, the fluorescent intensity of the streptavidin-coated beads was about

3x higher than the control beads. This is sufficient for typical optical detection tools to detect the

presence or absence of the antigen. This would be useful for a simple yes/no tests for diseases

like Ebola.

Figure 4:10 Image of the nylon bead with 8 pico moles of Streptavidin. 3x higher intensity

was observed in the presence of protein. The image was taken with a CCD camera attached

to a fluorescent microscope with each snapshot having a 50 ms exposure and with image

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

3500

No Streptavidin Streptavidin-coatedFlu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

U

nit

s)

Fluorescent intensities of beads

Figure 4:8 Fluorescent intensities of beads with no

added Streptavidin and Streptavidin-coated beads

upon the addition of Biotin conjugated with R-PE

Figure 4:9 Fluorescent intensities of beads with no

added Streptavidin and Streptavidin-coated beads

upon the addition of Biotin conjugated with R-PE

Page 69: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

49

Figure 4:11 Image of bead with no protein. Only the circular outline of the bead is visible

under the fluorescent microscope. The non-zero background could possibly be attributed to

auto-fluorescence of the bead itself.

Page 70: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

50

B) Quantitative Assay:

The next phase was to optimize this assay to enable quantitative enumeration of Streptavidin. A

variable quantity of streptavidin was added onto the beads and incubated. Then the blocking

agent (BSA) was added afterwards to block unbound sites on the bead surface. Finally, Biotin

conjugated with R-PE was added and imaged. The exact recipe is attached at the Appendix. The

results from ImageJ were plotted and shown below:

Figure 4:12 Variation of Fluorescent Intensity with added Streptavidin (direct adsorption).

The Streptavidin was added in increasing concentrations, incubated and washed. BSA was

added to block unbound sites on the surface of the beads. Finally, Biotin-RPE was added to

tubes containing the beads to use the fluorescent methods of detection. The images were

captured by a CCD camera and then fluorescent intensity information was extracted using

ImageJ by drawing a rectangular box and using the Analysis-> Measure toolbar. The

orange line at approximately 5000 intensity units represents the background fluorescence.

The graph indicates that the adsorption of Streptavidin rises monotonically with increasing

concentration. When the amount of Streptavidin is low, there is at most a 2x higher intensity

compared to the control bead intensity of ~5000 units. The brightest beads had 4x more intensity

than the beads without the protein. The lowest fluorescent intensity that could be discerned

corresponded to an initial quantity of 0.66 pico moles of Streptavidin.

y = 952.74x + 7669

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14

Flu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

Un

its)

Streptavidin Quantity (pico moles)

Fluorescent Intensity vs Streptavidin Quantity

Baseline Fluorescent Intensity

Page 71: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

51

4.6 C - reactive Protein assay

The subsequent phase was to develop an assay that would detect a specific disease. As discussed

earlier in the literature review section, C - reactive protein (CRP) is an important biomarker for

Sepsis as discussed in earlier sections. Detecting this protein using adsorption test on the beads

would be an important step towards integrating this module on a 3D printed platform.

Researchers [80] have previously found that 75% of the adsorption is completed in the first 5

minutes. Further increase in the time will correspond to more adsorption. In this thesis, the

incubation was done for several hours just to ensure that adsorption would be close to the

theoretical maximum. The assay steps are illustrated in the figure below:

Figure 4:13 Flow chart for direct (non-specific) capture of the CRP antigen. Nylon beads

were used as a substrate for capturing antigen through adsorption. They are then bound

with primary antibody C2 followed by secondary antibody (IgG1 conjugated with R-PE).

The secondary antibody has a fluorescent tag that emits strongly at 585 nm. Additional

blocking and washing steps are not shown.

Page 72: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

52

The typical volumes of a pinprick of blood is 25 µl. This corresponds to about 2.5 µg of the CRP

antigen present in that volume when the levels rise beyond 100 mg/L during a bacterial infection.

This corresponds to 0.1 nano moles of CRP.

An experiment was performed with the addition of 8, 16 and 32 µg of CRP (available from

Hytest [81])directly onto the beads (corresponding to 0.32, 0.64 and 1.28 nano moles

respectively) followed by the primary (C2) Antibody and the fluorescently tagged secondary

Antibody (IgG1-PE) from Invitrogen [78]. The complete recipe is attached in the Appendix. The

results are depicted below:

Figure 4:14 Fluorescent intensity emitted on the surface of the bead when coated with

CRP. A linear trend was observed with the emitted fluorescent intensity from the bead

increasing with higher input concentration of CRP on the bead. The orange line at

approximately 5000 intensity units represents the background fluorescence.

Discussion:

From the above graph, it is noted that the complete absence of CRP was marked by fluorescent

intensity level no greater than the background level of approximately 5000 units. However high

CRP concentrations (0.32, 0.64 and 1.28 nano moles) assay were marked by increasing intensity,

which can be approximated by a linear equation. This suggests that the assay developed in this

y = 13748x + 4527.8

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4

Flu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

Un

its)

CRP Quantity (nano moles)

Fluorescent Intensity vs CRP Quantity

Page 73: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

53

thesis was capable of detecting CRP concentrations beyond the 100 mg/L seen during bacterial

sepsis. Theoretically [80], the graph would flatten out as the surface adsorbed proteins reach

saturation similar to what was observed for specific capture of CRP

This simple yes/no test could be further improved by lowering the amount of CRP needed to get

a detectable signal. This can be achieved by the use of capture antibodies in the first step

followed by the addition of CRP antigen. This capture antibody coated on the surface of the

beads also ensures that non-specific adsorption does not occur. As noted in the previous sections

on Antibody stability, protein adsorbed on the surface of the beads are stable in solution unless

displaced by higher binding energy protein at a higher concentration. In case this assay was

adapted for commercial applications, large batches of beads would be indicated with an excess of

the capture antibody ready for the assay.

To illustrate this sandwich ELISA-like test, experiments were performed with the following

procedure:

An excess of monoclonal anti-CRP Antibody C6 (from Hytest [81]) was incubated with the

beads to ensure a monolayer was obtained with the above capture antibodies on the bead surface.

After a washing step to remove unbound C6 antibody, CRP was added to the beads and

incubated. After a washing step, a blocking agent (2.5 % BSA) was added to cover any

remaining unbound sites on the bead surface. Subsequently, the monoclonal detection antibody

C2 (from Hytest [81]) was added, incubated and washed. This ensures the CRP is between the

antibodies C6 and C2 as illustrated in the figure below:

Page 74: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

54

Figure 4:15 Flow chart for indirect (specific) capture and fluorescent detection of the CRP

antigen. This is similar to Figure 4:12 except there was an additional step initially to coat

the Capture Antibody. This method is more specific to CRP and has a better Limit of

Detection due to the smaller quantity of CRP required.

The last step was to add the fluorescent-tagged antibody that binds with C2. Polyclonal Goat

Anti-mouse IgG1 bound with R-PE was added, incubated and washed. The beads were taken and

imaged. The results are shown below:

Page 75: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

55

Figure 4:16 Fluorescent intensity vs. concentration of CRP using the indirect capture. The

orange line around 5000 intensity units represents background fluorescent intensity of the

bead. A logarithmic trend in the emitted fluorescent intensity was observed.

As expected, increasing the concentration of the added antigen caused an increase in the

fluorescent intensity. The data suggests that there is a logarithmic rise in the fluorescent intensity

with CRP quantity. This could be either because the capture antibody sites were nearly saturated

with CRP or the secondary antibody does not have enough space to attach itself due to steric

hindrance.

The advantage of this method over the previous direct adsorption method is that similar output

fluorescent intensities were achieved with nearly 1000x lower CRP concentration. This implies

that using this ELISA scheme to quantify CRP is more sensitive than direct adsorption This

would ease the hardware requirements for lower concentrations typically seen in viral infections.

y = 5603.1ln(x) + 9237.2

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18

Flu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

Un

its)

CRP Quantity (pico moles)

Fluorescent Intensities vs CRP Quantity

Baseline Fluorescent Intensity

Page 76: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

56

Additional tests were perfomed to see if the assay conditions themselves could be optimized. A

bead with the bound fluorophore was taken and imaged. It was imaged again after three more

washing steps. It was noted that the presence of the washing step had negligible effects on the

binding. The fluorescent intensity of a particular bead was compared before and after several

washing steps. There was little change in the bead intensity indicating that the adsorption is

stable.

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

1 Wash 3 Washes

Flu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

Un

its)

Washing Steps

Fluorescent Intensity vs Washing steps

Figure 4:16

Figure 4:17 Stability of the binding across washing steps. The number

of washing steps (to remove any excess reagents) caused an

insignificant change in the emitted intensity. This suggests that the

binding of the protein on the bead surface was relatively stable as was

discussed in section 4.4

Page 77: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

57

The effects of the exposure time on the fluorescent intensity were also tested, it was noted that

after 1 minute of constant exposure, the emitted light intensity faded away and was

indistinguishable from a bead that had no antigen. This indicates that care has to be taken to

ensure measurements are taken immediately to avoid photo bleaching.

Figure 4:18 Effect of exposure on the emitted fluorescent light intensity. Due to the

technical limitations of the imaging unit, snapshots were taken every 30 seconds until the

emitted intensity faded away to the level of background.

In this chapter, a bead-based assay was demonstrated for the Sepsis biomarker called CRP. This

assay was performed in tubes instead of fluidic channels. Due to the large diameter of the bead,

no immobilization would be necessary in case this assay were to be performed on a 3D printed

fluidic device. Two designs of proof-of-concept disposable 3D printed modules were developed

for holding the beads and are listed in Appendix A.

y = -4.5329x2 + 41.69x + 19356

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

Flu

ore

scen

t In

ten

sity

(A

rbit

rary

Un

its)

Expsoure (seconds)

Fluorescent Intensity vs Exposure

Baseline Fluorescent Intensity

Page 78: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

58

Chapter 5

Optical Detection System

5.1 Point-of-Care manufacturer

Globally, remote or rural areas lacking access to diagnostic capacity results in preventable

deaths. ChipCare’s device, a lab quality, point-of-care blood testing platform, increases access to

life-saving diagnostics for people without access to primary health care.

ChipCare Corporation is a Toronto-based IVD medical device company [82]. To target POC

applications targeted at linking people with HIV to appropriate treatments, ChipCare Corp will

be rolling out a portable blood testing platform in 2016. The envisioned product entails two

components: handheld reader and disposable test cartridge. Blood sample is drawn on to a

disposable plastic cartridge via a finger prick. Upon the insertion of the cartridge into the

handheld analyzer, blood analysis result is available in 10 – 15 minutes.

Currently, the handheld reader for just the cell count has been designed and assembled.

However, the same reader cannot currently perform protein-based assays for infectious and non-

communicable diseases. The development of the new versatile detection system in this project

was a starting step that will enable both cell and protein based assays to be performed on the

same device. The development of 3D printed bench top prototype developed in this chapter was

undertaken through support from the Mitacs Accelerate internship

5.2 Existing HIV diagnostic methods

In this section, review of HIV diagnostic methods available commercially and under research are

discussed. The WHO review article [83] introduced some common detection methods employed

in diagnostics as well as POC Diagnostics companies adopting these technologies.

Acquired Immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a disease caused by the Human Immunovirus

(HIV). The CD4+ T lymphocytes cells of the immune system get destroyed and the infected

patient is left vulnerable to other infections [84]. The pandemic nature of AIDS meant that a lot

of resources have been allocated to diagnostics and treatment. The resulting progress has seen a

Page 79: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

59

20 % reduction in the number of people newly infected since 1998 [85]. However, the disease

still represents a challenge to economic progress due to the large number of people (34 million

infected as of 2010) infected. Since the disease is highly infectious at an early stage, early and

accurate detection is important. Furthermore, timely access to treatment enables patients to

reduce adverse health outcomes and increases their life expectancy.

The tests for one-off diagnosis are well established (ELISA) [86]. However, ongoing treatment

for HIV requires timely knowledge of the disease progression within a patient. Detecting CD4,

Viral Load and Early Infant diagnosis (EID) present hurdles to be overcome. The present

generation of lab-based platforms are expensive, as they require long-distance specimen

transportation. This makes diagnostics out-of-reach for people in remote areas. Community-level

access to Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) will require simple, affordable POC diagnostics

without the patient having to undergo arduous journey to the clinic. To characterize POC

devices, World Health Organization (WHO) introduced the ASSURED (Affordable, Sensitive,

Specific, User-friendly, Robust, Equipment-free) criteria [87].

The analytical targets for POC devices can be proteins, nucleic acids, human cells, bacteria,

viruses, etc. [86] The Ora Quick Rapid HIV-1/2 Antibody Test is a lateral flow test using oral

fluid specimens. Another POC device is Aware HIV-1/2 U that is an alternative ELISA test and

claims to have 100% specificity and 97% sensitivity. [89] The technologies involving blood

samples are a lot simpler in their implementation compared to the products above.

In general, HIV diagnostics can be divided into three varieties: a) Initial diagnosis, b) tests to

quantify the patient stage c) Tests to monitor the success of ART. HIV testing can be done on

either the anti-HIV anitibody or the p24 antigen [90]. The antibody may not show up in the blood

for several weeks after infection, yet, the person is highly infectious in the first weeks. Tests to

determine both the antibody and the antigen will decrease the probabilities of false negatives and

are required for purposes for accuracy.

P24 antigen can be detected during the early stage HIV infection because it is characterized by

early spike in the antigens. In most patients, this early spike is detectable until the levels decrease

due to the patient’s immune response to the infection. After several years, the antigen levels start

increasing again with the failure of the immune system and the antigens become detectable

again. There are several viral proteins of which p24 is quite prominent as it is the major internal

Page 80: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

60

structural protein of HIV-1. Hence, quantifying p24 is useful for a) identifying early HIV

infection b) diagnosing infant infection and c) monitoring the success of ART [91]

HIV viral load tests can quantify the patient’s disease progression stage as well as the ART

treatment success. Reverse Transcriptase (RT) protein serves as a valid indicator of HIV load

and is a cheaper alternative to longer nucleic acid tests. However, RT viral load tests are not as

reliable as results obtained from PCR. They do have the advantage of detecting multiple

subtypes of HIV and also HIV load in pediatric patients [92].

Viral load testing can be further divided into Nucleic Acid-based Tests (NAT) and non-NAT

based technologies. Viral RNAs are used in NAT technologies to quantify and to detect, while

non-NAT technologies use proteins and enzymes from the HIV virus itself. NATs are usually

more reliable as clinicians are familiar with interpreting the results [93]. Some of the RT-PCR

system examples are given below.

Roche Molecular System’s COBAS HIV Monitor, Abbott’s Real-time HIV-1 and Siemen’s

VERSANT HIV-1 RNA assay [94].

RT assays can be correlated to the levels of HIV virus by quantifying the viral enzyme [95].

ExaVir Load from Cavidi AB is an example of RT assay and is generally less expensive.

Moreover, it does not target any specific Nucleic Acid, so the assay can measure any HIV

subtype.

The gold standard for quantitative viral load testing is RT-qPCR. PCR amplifies regions of DNA

in vitro and can create millions of copies by cycling between different temperatures. However,

the test requires trained technicians, expensive reagents and dedicated lab space to run it.

Furthermore, the nature of the PCR reaction means that the simplicity of the PCR chemistry is

overridden by the use of complicated supporting hardware. This makes the hardware unsuitable

for POC settings.

Page 81: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

61

5.3 HIV monitoring using CD4 counts

The Human Immuno Virus depletes the patient’s CD4+ T Lymphocyte count, therefore HIV can

also be quantified indirectly by measuring CD4 counts. Antiretroviral Therapy has to be begun to

slow the progression of the disease to AIDS. Additionally, the risk of disease transmission from

the mother to the child can be reduced upon treatment [85]. The WHO recommendation is for the

treatment to begin at counts below 350 cells/µl. With the aim of achieving CD4 cell counts using

easier-to-use POC devices (reduced blood volume, portable instrumentation, rapid test results,

etc), a few diagnostic companies have released their products. There are a few portable devices

that carry this test: PointCare NOW, Partec’s CyFlow, Alere’s Pima and Daktari Diagnostics’

Daktari CD4+. These devices are powered by batteries, require finger pricks of blood (<25 uL)

and provide rapid results and they do not require cold storage for their reagents [84].

The technologies underlying some of the POC devices are discussed in this section. Daktari’s

test [96] uses a chromatography gradient to capture CD4+ cells from whole blood and a non-

optical method of counting. The cartridge is disposable and contains the reagents. The cells are

captured by antibody-coated chamber and then selectively lysed. The cellular ions are imaged by

impedance spectroscopy. This impedance can be correlated to the cell count over the required

range.

The Pima [97] device has two fluorescence channels to detect labelled anti-hCD3 and anti-hCD4.

The cartridge and the detection analyzer are separate. The disposable cartridge has all the

reagents and the specimen. The absolute counts of the CD3+ and CD4+ cells are displayed along

with the Quality Control results.

In addition to the above advantages, 1) Easier technology implementation 2) Wider choice of

reagents 3) Readily available market encourages the development of fluorescent assays, CD4

quantification using fluorescent particle counting was thus chosen by ChipCare Corp as their

choice of POC technology implementation.

Page 82: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

62

5.4 Fluorescence Microscope Background

A brief review of the fluorescent microscope is presented in this chapter. Optical detection is the

simplest and therefore the most widely used in immunoassay applications. Optical methods are

again divided into 5 classes: fluorescence, luminescence, absorbance, surface plasmon resonance

(SPR) and surface enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS). Fluorescence has the largest number of

applications due to the sensitivity and range of available colors. They are also suitable for

multiplexing and offer very low Limit of Detection (LOD).

In a fluorescent microscope, the specimen is irradiated with a small band of wavelengths and the

weaker emitted light is collected after separating it from the much stronger excitation light. The

excitation light is 5 -6 orders of magnitude brighter than the emitted light is usually stopped by

the use of optical filters. The limit of detection for the fluorescently detected light is constrained

by how dark the background is. The higher the contrast of the signal, the better.

The epi-fluorescent microscope [98] consists of a high-intensity light source that directs light

onto the specimen through the objective lens (Illuminator). The microscope uses the same

objective lens to capture the emitted light. The advantage of the vertical illumination is that most

of the excitation light is

scattered away and only

a small portion is

collected by the

objective. This improves

the signal-to-noise ratio.

Additionally, the

illumination area is the

same as the collection

area thus utilizing the

full Numerical Aperture

(NA) of the Objective.

Page 83: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

63

Figure 5:1 Epi-fluorescent microscope ([98]). The light source emits all wavelengths which

are filtered by the excitation filter within the filter cube. The sample receives this light and

emits a longer wavelength collected by the objective lens. Then it passes through the

emission filter into either the eyepiece or the camera.

Redirection of the illumination into the objective, segregation of the excitation light are both

accomplished by the elements

contained within the filter cube

[99]. This contains the dichromatic

mirror (which has different

reflectance and transmittance for

excitation and emission) and the

emission filter (bandpass filter

with the fluorophore’s emission

spectrum).

The ChipCare CD4 lab prototype uses a variation of the microscope setup with a finite optical

system and the excitation laser source coming at an angle. This simpler setup uses fewer optical

components and is cheaper to build. The description of the system that was built is given in the

next section

Figure 5:2 Illustration of the Filter Cube containing the Dichroic mirror and the filters

(Courtesy Nikon [99]) The illumination is from the right side and the light is reflected

downwards onto the specimen using the dichromatic mirror. Then the emitted fluorescence

light is allowed to pass through the same mirror and filtered by the Emission filter before

optical detection through a camera

Page 84: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

64

5.5 System Description

The aim of this part of this project was to come up with a flexible system for the laboratory CD4

cell counting device. The overall schematic for the completed device is shown below

Figure 5:3 CD4 cell counting setup prototyped using 3D printed parts. The 3D printed

components are denoted in color. The setup was screwed onto a standard optical base. The

other external components were translation stage for the optical tube, rotary stage for the

laser, stepper motor and the disposable cartridge itself.

The previous lab setup was heavy and had a large footprint because the xyz adjustment stages for

the Optical Tube was large. Additionally, the laser and the cartridge were held in place by

clamps which made their relative adjustments not user-friendly.

To improve the user-friendliness of the lab setup, a modular approach was adopted for the

individual units as described in this section. The old lab setup was decomposed and each unit

was analyzed for improvements. New external parts were chosen for the external components

chosen for the laser angular stage & z axis translation stage and xyz stage for the optical tube to

be small.

The connecting parts were designed using Solidworks and created using 3D printing on a Zortrax

M200 printer. The turnaround time for each part was a few hours, significantly faster than

Page 85: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

65

machining. The other advantage of 3D printing was the lower weight: the use of Plastic (ABS or

PLA) ensured the final device weighed at least 50% less than a similar metal piece. The

difference was due to the lower density of ABS (1.05 g/cc) vs. Aluminum (2.7 g/cc) [100].

The custom-built modules were Stepper Motor, Microfluidic Cartridge Holder, Laser and the

Optical Tube Holder Modules. Their purpose is described below:

Two types of disposable cartridges were being used at ChipCare (a) an old cartridge

(Resuspension) that had just the microfluidic channels and required connection to a black

pumping cartridge and b) A new (blue) cartridge that combined the microfluidic channels and the

bellow). Since experiments were being performed on both types of cartridges, an interchangeable

module was required that made it easy to swap the two types of cartridges.

The other criterion was the Stepper Motor

had to be physically held in position and

aligned with the bellow of the cartridge. The

combined part is connected to the Base Plate

using a custom-designed slider. This slider

design allows the module to be removed to

make space for the Resuspension Cartridge

Holder when necessary

Figure 5:4 Cartridge Module with custom-designed sliding base for easy removal. The parts

in pink were 3D printed while the green layer in the middle was the PCB controlling the

Stepper Motor. The cartridge is shown inserted on the right side with its bellow facing the

blue shaft of the motor.

Page 86: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

66

When experiments were required to be

performed on the older Resuspension

cartridge, the Cartridge Module was slid out

and the Resuspension Cartridge holder

inserted. This module was designed so that

the detection spot is at the same location as

the newer cartridge even though the two

cartridges have different sizes and shapes. In

addition, there were two orientations that the

Resuspension Cartridge could be inserted,

vertical and horizontal, having two different

detection spots. Both orientations were

accounted for in this custom-design.

The 530 nm laser required Off-the-Shelf Rotary stage and

a Z-axis translation stage for easy adjustment. The Z-axis

stage was slid into a custom-built holder. The other side

was attached to another custom-built holder for the

Rotary Stage. On top of the Rotary Stage, the machined

Laser cover were attached.

Figure 5:6 Laser Module containing custom-designed

adapters for the Z-axis stage, Rotary Stage and the

Laser Covers

Figure 5:5 Resuspension Cartridge Holder. The transparent piece at the top is a

representation of the older Resuspension cartridge.

Page 87: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

67

This module contains a base that holds the xyz stage and two complementary hollow pieces that

enclosed the Optical Tube.

Figure 5:7 Optical Tube Holder Module with the grey xyz translation stage controlling the

relative position of the tube (not shown)

Some optical components were purchased from Thorlabs [101] that were slid into the Optical

Tube Module.

1) SM1A9TS – Thermally-insulated Adapter with external C-Mount threads to internal SM1

threads (from CCD Camera’s CMount to Optical Tube)

2) SM1V10 – Adjustable optical tube with required length 20.1 mm

3) SM1L05 – Fixed Length Optical Tube with length 13.5 mm

4) SM1L40 – Fixed Length Optical Tube of length 102.4 mm

5) SM1A3 – Adapter with external SM1 threads and internal RMS threads (from Optical

Tube to Objective Lens)

These components were determined and the required lengths were calculated from the fact that

the distance between the Objective lens and the active area of the CCD camera was 160 mm.

Page 88: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

68

5.6 Issues resolved

Vibrational issues: The hinges of the xyz translation stage that was used for aligning the optical

tube was not rigid enough to withstand the weight of the parts that were being suspended from it.

In previous versions of the setup, it was noticed that the image would drift. This was because the

center of gravity of the module was closer to the camera side causing the optical tube to tilt to

one side. Additional vibrations were noticed when the setup touched.

Changing the following minimized the vibration: the attachment position of the optical tube

holder was moved such that the center of mass was closer to the xyz stage. Additionally, screw

holes were introduced at the corners of the optical tube to seal the two halves together. Finally,

the mass of the plastic module base was increased.

Laser Module: The laser was aimed at an angle to the objective tube. To ensure proper focus, it

was necessary to include an angular adjustment tool and a z axis translation stage. However on

inclusion of these, it was noticed that the laser module spot was too tall. To fix this issue, the

module’s base was hollowed out and the laser holder was made as thin as possible.

Cartridge Holder: The disposable cartridge had to be imaged from one side and pumped from the

opposite side. This meant that the both faces had to be exposed save for a narrow region

surrounding the perimeter that was used for attachment. This was achieved by printing a rim-like

holder for the perimeter of the cartridge.

The robustness of the setup was verified by performing experiments at different orientations

(horizontal, vertical, sideways and at various angles in between) to determine the optimum angle

of the cartridge. The crucial advantage of 3D printed parts was that there was scope for trial and

error. The locking mechanism was through sliding a unit into the appropriate area rather than

using moving parts or clips.

Page 89: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

69

5.7 Verification by CD4 Cell and fluorescent bead counting

The disposable cartridge was loaded with blood mixed with fluorescent reagents that bind to

CD4 cells. The cartridge was sealed and inserted into the cartridge module with the transparent

side facing the optics. The system was powered up and the objective focus was adjusted until a

clear view of the detection spot in the cartridge was displayed on the computer screen. To ensure

mixing of the reagents, the blood sample was pumped using a stepper motor. After an

appropriate number of mixing cycles, the sample was allowed to flow through the detection

region within the cartridge. The green laser and the objective were adjusted to point only at the

detection region and the video was recorded.

When the older (Resuspension) version of the cartridge was needed to be tested, the entire

module was taken out from the base through the sliding mechanism. Then the holder for the

other version of the cartridge was inserted and tests would be run as usual. The following

procedure was used to extract relevant data from the captured videos.

The unit was built and tested using various cartridges using blood mixed with Quality Control

Fluorescent Beads. Recorded pictures from the camera were imported to ImageJ. Then a demo

software for particle characterization was used to process the image stack. Important parameters,

such as fluorescent total intensity and particle size, were extracted from the images and analyzed

using Microsoft Excel.

The graphs and data so obtained were consistent with the older (non-3D printed) lab setup.

Hence, the performance of the new modular lab unit was verified.

Page 90: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

70

Chapter 6

Future work and conclusions

6.1 Conclusions

This thesis demonstrated the goal of inter-device operability by building modules through 3D

printing suitable for integration with POC medical devices.

An example of a sample preparation module was presented in Chapter 3. Plasma was separated

from whole blood using a PETE filter membrane on a 3D printed capillary channel. The test was

demonstrated by filtering out 3.4 µm fluorescent beads that were mixed with whole blood. This

unit does not require an external power supply to achieve separation in contrast to conventional

centrifuge systems. This module can be the first stage in a multi-step diagnostic device aimed at

Point-of-Care settings. The extracted plasma can be either suctioned off using a pipette from the

capillaries after removing the filter paper or diluted by the addition of a buffer fluid and carried

downstream for the appropriate protein assay when used in an integrated POC device. Its

modular nature offers healthcare providers the flexibility of integrating it as a sample preparation

stage in plug-and-play diagnostic kits.

In Chapter 4, a bead-based assay was demonstrated for the Sepsis biomarker C-Reactive Protein

on the surface of a nylon bead. The quantity of CRP necessary to run the test was found to be

suitable for analysis from finger-prick volumes of blood. The direct adsorption assay gave a

linear trend for high CRP concentrations (>100 mg/l) typically seen in bacterial infections. On

the other hand, the indirect capture of CRP, by coating the bead with specific antibodies, gave a

sufficiently high signal to discern viral infections. A logarithmic trend was observed empirically.

The detection range of the two bead based assays were thus useful for identifying bacterial from

viral causes of Sepsis. By combining both types of beads in a single cartridge, this assay can be a

useful tool for the doctors in prescribing antibiotics in treating infection. This can be adapted for

microfluidic volumes due to the small quantities of sample required to get a relevant signal. The

bead-based assay offers researchers the option of multiplexing several protein detection. This can

Page 91: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

71

be achieved by coating the appropriate antibody on the surface of the bead. The large nature of

the bead means that it can be immobilized relatively easily on a 3D printed well-type fluidic

channel.

In Chapter 5, system-level application of 3D printing was demonstrated by prototyping an optical

detection unit for a disposable microfluidic cartridge developed at ChipCare Corp. The

customized setup was modular and weighed at least 50% less than if the parts were machined

because they were plastic and because parts can be hollowed out.

Due to the modularity enabled by 3D printing technique, the designs can be easily adapted to

detect other diseases. For example, to use the fluorescent detection system (demonstrated in

Chapter 5) for diagnosing Sepsis would require swapping out the existing CD4 cartridge and

inserting the Bead-based Assay cartridge. The use of the Blood Plasma filtration module for

sample preparation would be needed only if the fluorescent signal coming the beads are found to

be weak in the presence of interfering blood cells.

To detect diseases other than Sepsis or HIV from blood, the required capture antibody will be

coated on the Nylon bead surface first and then the bead-based assay cartridge can be used with

the existing fluorescent detection system. The applicability of 3D printing in various stages of

assay development and prototyping was demonstrated. The following section describes some

suggestions on further research in this field.

6.2 Future Work

Given the rapidly advancing field of additive manufacturing, the existing limitations on size and

resolution can be easily overcome in the coming years. However to adapt this technology for

POC applications requires further research into the material aspect:

i) Sample contamination: The most popular materials for 3D printing are ABS, PLA

and Methyl Methacrylate. Currently, very little research exists on using these for

handling blood or other biological samples. It remains to be seen if ABS has

particular affinity for specific proteins existing in the blood samples or exhibits

toxicity when exposed to certain reagents. It is hoped that interest in using 3D

Page 92: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

72

printing for medical devices will spur advancements in this field and a wider selection

of compatible materials will be available in the coming decade.

ii) Optical Detection: PLA is opaque while ABS and resin-based materials can be up to

90% transparent. However, this transparency is still less than conventional POC

materials such as PMMA thus worsening the Limit of Detection (LOD) for

experiments involving light transmission through the material. Additionally, auto

fluorescence properties of the different materials needs to explored.

iii) Disposal: The plastic materials similar to those used in 3D printing are usually sent to

the landfill as their physical strength degrades. ABS degradation takes hundreds of

years while PLA takes several years. Since, bio-hazardous waste generated by the

disposable medical devices are usually incinerated, research has to be undertaken to

see the effects of burning 3D printed materials.

iv) Material: To take full advantage of the resolution offered by 3D printers, new less

viscous resin have to be developed. Though the highest stated resolution from Table

2-1 above is ~1 µm, in practice this would not be achievable for internal microfluidic

channels. This is because for resin-based laser printers, the limiting factor would be

the viscosity of the resin: when internal channels are being created, how fast the cured

resin can drain out decides the smallest internal cavity feature that can be formed.

For the sample preparation module, the relationship of filtration time to the volume of the input

sample needs to be explored. Due to the small number of capillary channels, a few drops placed

at the right location was found to be sufficient to cover the channels and saturate them with the

collected fluid. With the right microfluidic optimization, the dead volume of the unfiltered

droplets of blood can be reduced. Numerical models could be developed for blood enabling

visualization of the separation process leading to optimization of the capillary designs.

For the bead-based assay module, the passive adsorption process can be replaced by a stronger

(covalent) binding method for antibodies that have poor affinity for the bead surface. The assay

in this thesis was performed using pure CRP samples. Therefore, the assay needs to be validated

with plasma or serum. Multiplexing could be done to detect multiple proteins from the blood

Page 93: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

73

plasma to ensure a robust diagnostic test for Sepsis. This could be achieved by coating different

beads with different antibodies.

Agarose beads can be tried instead of nylon beads to get a 3-dimensional adsorption through the

volume of the bead. They can be packed more with the capture antibodies as they are porous than

nylon beads which are non-porous. Flow optimization could also be performed to ensure proper

volumes of reagents are mixed at the right velocity and pressure by performing simulations in a

Multiphysics software package such as COMSOL.

In Chapter 5, the volume of printing area of Zortrax M200 limited the size of the parts created by

the 3D printer. Given a large enough printer, it would be possible to create an enclosure resulting

in further reduction in the mass of the setup. Future work can also be aimed at shrinking the

optical detection unit further by using smaller optical components, shorter focal lengths and laser

diodes instead of a laser. Multiple lenses could be used to achieve the same magnification but

without requiring the 160 mm optical path. One method of achieving this would be to place the

cartridge at the focal point of the first lens. Then the second lens can be placed at the focus of the

camera. The rays will be parallel between the lenses. The use of an integrated laser diode within

the PCB of the Stepper Motor module beneath the cartridge could save space.

In the coming decades, advances in 3D printing will enable the prototyping of microfluidic

cartridges as well as optical components like lenses, etc. This will give researchers the power to

create any component within the confines of their lab if they have access to the design files. The

design of a modular fluorescence detection system allows researchers to focus on developing just

the cartridge side of the assay. With distributed access to manufacturing available through 3D

printing, medical device vendors will start selling their design files instead of their products. It is

hoped that this will give rise to interoperability of devices as envisioned by the WHO.

Page 94: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

74

References or Bibliography

Bibliography

[1] Global Consultation on Diagnostics Interoperability Standards: 11-12 June 2015, Geneva,

Switzerland. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2015. 69. Print.

[2] C. Chin, V. Linder and S. Sia, "Commercialization of microfluidic point-of-care diagnostic

devices", Lab on a Chip, vol. 12, no. 12, p. 2118, 2012.

[3] I. Inc., "Adobe Systems - a brief history", Investintech.com, 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.investintech.com/resources/articles/adobehistory/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[4] J. Daley, "Why Health-Care Franchising Is Entering a Boom Time", Entrepreneur, 2014.

[Online]. Available: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/231788. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[5] BBC News, "Rapid tests 'would cut antibiotic use' - BBC News", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-34607822. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[6] BBC News, "Fears grow over increased antibiotic resistance - BBC News", 2016. [Online].

Available: http://www.bbc.com/news/health-34541253. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[7] Who.int, "WHO | Malaria rapid diagnostic tests", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.who.int/malaria/areas/diagnosis/rapid-diagnostic-tests/en/. [Accessed: 11- Jan-

2016].

[8] Forbes.com, "Forbes Welcome", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/matthewherper/2015/02/11/brain-boom-the-drug-companies-

bringing-neuroscience-back-from-the-brink/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[9] Selectscience.net, "Improving Clinical Decision-Making and Efficiency in Healthcare

Settings", 2016. [Online]. Available: http://www.selectscience.net/selectscience-

interviews/improving-clinical-decision-making-and-efficiency-in-healthcare-

settings/?artID=39248. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

Page 95: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

75

[10] Stratos Product Development, "Point-of-Care and In Vitro Diagnostics", 2016. [Online].

Available: https://www.stratos.com/point-care-and-vitro-diagnostics. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[11] Gsid.org, "Global Solutions for Infectious Diseases", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.gsid.org/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[12] Hospital Healthcare Europe, "Results from three studies highlight the value of a handheld,

portable blood analyser in patient care", 2015. [Online]. Available:

http://www.hospitalhealthcare.com/editors-pick/results-three-studies-highlight-value-handheld-

portable-blood-analyser-patient-care. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[13] Abbottpointofcare.com, "i-STAT System & Piccolo Xpress | Abbott Point of Care", 2016.

[Online]. Available: https://www.abbottpointofcare.com/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[14] Point of Care Emergency Department Acute Rapid laboratory (PEARL): Win-Win for the

Lab and for ED?" by Dr. Eric Revue

[15] LWW, "Can the Introduction of Point-of-Care Testing for Renal Func... : Point of Care",

2016. [Online]. Available:

http://journals.lww.com/poctjournal/Abstract/2015/03000/Can_the_Introduction_of_Point_of_C

are_Testing_for.6.aspx. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[16] D. Stuckler, L. King and S. Basu, "International Monetary Fund Programs and Tuberculosis

Outcomes in Post-Communist Countries", PLoS Med, vol. 5, no. 7, p. e143, 2008.

[17] Ghdonline.org, "[ARCHIVED] Building Capacity for Diagnostics | Global Health Delivery

Online: Improving health care delivery through global collaboration", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.ghdonline.org/diagnostics-panel/briefs/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[18] Who.int, "WHO | The human resources for health crisis", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.who.int/workforcealliance/about/hrh_crisis/en/index.html. [Accessed: 11- Jan-

2016].

[19] J. Dou, L. Chen, R. Nayyar and S. Aitchison, "A microfluidic based optical particle

detection method", Optical Diagnostics and Sensing XII: Toward Point-of-Care Diagnostics;

Page 96: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

76

and Design and Performance Validation of Phantoms Used in Conjunction with Optical

Measurement of Tissue IV, 2012.

[20] D. Heikali and D. Di Carlo, "A Niche for Microfluidics in Portable Hematology

Analyzers", Journal of the Association for Laboratory Automation, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 319-328,

2010.

[21] Theranos.com, "Theranos", 2016. [Online]. Available: https://www.theranos.com/centers.

[Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[ 22] Cotteleer, Mark, Mark Neier, and Jeff Crane. "3D Opportunity in Tooling." Additive

Manufacturing in Tooling – 3D Printing. Deloitte University Press, 7 Apr. 2014. Web. 31 Dec.

2015.

[23 ] Cotteleer, Mark and Jim Joyce. " 3D opportunity: Additive manufacturing paths to

performance, innovation, and growth." Deloitte University Press, 17 Jan. 2014. Web. 31 Dec.

2015.

[ 24] Wohlers, Terry T. “Wohlers Report 2013: Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing State of

the Industry: Annual Worldwide Progress Report.” Wohlers Associates, 2013. 127. Print.

[25 ] "Additive layered manufacturing: sectors of industrial application shown through case

studies", International Journal of Production Research, 2016.

[26 ] Stratasys.com, 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.stratasys.com/~/media/Main/Secure/White-

Papers/Rebranded/SSYSWP3DPrintingJigsFixtures0313.pdf?la=en. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[ 27] 3D Systems, "The ProJet® 3500 3D Printer Saves Citizen Watch Time and Money", 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.3dsystems.com/learning-center/case-studies/projetr-3500-3d-

printer-saves-citizen-watch-time-and-money. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[ 28] Orthotown.com, "3D Printing: How a Star Trek Fantasy has Become Reality for the Dental

and Orthodontic Professions", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.orthotown.com/Orthotown/Article.aspx?i=283&aid=3813. [Accessed: 11- Jan-

2016].

Page 97: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

77

[ 29] 3D Systems: Digital Dental Solutions, "Orthodontics", 2016. [Online]. Available: ,”

http://www.toptobottomdental.com/orthodontics.html. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[27] K. Lee, K. Park, S. Seok, S. Shin, D. Kim, J. Park, Y. Heo, S. Lee and T. Lee, "3D printed

modules for integrated microfluidic devices", RSC Advances, vol. 4, no. 62, p. 32876, 2014.

[28] K. Bhargava, B. Thompson and N. Malmstadt, "Discrete elements for 3D

microfluidics", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 111, no. 42, pp. 15013-

15018, 2014.

[29] O. Paydar, C. Paredes, Y. Hwang, J. Paz, N. Shah and R. Candler, "Characterization of 3D-

printed microfluidic chip interconnects with integrated O-rings", Sensors and Actuators A:

Physical, vol. 205, pp. 199-203, 2014.

[30] G. Comina, A. Suska and D. Filippini, "Low cost lab-on-a-chip prototyping with a

consumer grade 3D printer", Lab on a Chip, vol. 14, no. 16, p. 2978, 2014.

[31] W. Lee, D. Kwon, W. Choi, G. Jung and S. Jeon, "3D-Printed Microfluidic Device for the

Detection of Pathogenic Bacteria Using Size-based Separation in Helical Channel with

Trapezoid Cross-Section", Sci. Rep., vol. 5, p. 7717, 2015.

[32] C. Chen, Y. Wang, S. Lockwood and D. Spence, "3D-printed fluidic devices enable

quantitative evaluation of blood components in modified storage solutions for use in transfusion

medicine", The Analyst, vol. 139, no. 13, pp. 3219-3226, 2014.

[33] J. Prikryl and F. Foret, "Fluorescence Detector for Capillary Separations Fabricated

by 3D Printing", Analytical Chemistry, vol. 86, no. 24, pp. 11951-11956, 2014.

[34] A. Roda, M. Guardigli, D. Calabria, M. Calabretta, L. Cevenini and E. Michelini, "A 3D-

printed device for a smartphone-based chemiluminescence biosensor for lactate in oral fluid and

sweat", The Analyst, vol. 139, no. 24, pp. 6494-6501, 2014.

[35] 3D Hubs, "2016 Best 3D Printer Guide", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.3dhubs.com/best-3d-printer-guide. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

Page 98: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

78

[36] P. O'Neill, A. Ben Azouz, M. Vázquez, J. Liu, S. Marczak, Z. Slouka, H. Chang, D.

Diamond and D. Brabazon, "Advances in three-dimensional rapid prototyping of microfluidic

devices for biological applications", Biomicrofluidics, vol. 8, no. 5, p. 052112, 2014.

[37] Formlabs.com, "Form 1+ High-Resolution Desktop 3D Printer – Formlabs", 2016. [Online].

Available: http://formlabs.com/products/3d-printers/form-1-plus/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[38] ZORTRAX, "Zortrax M200 3D printer", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://zortrax.com/printers/zortrax-m200/. [Accessed: 11- Jan- 2016].

[39] M. Kersaudy-Kerhoas and E. Sollier, "Micro-scale blood plasma separation: from

acoustophoresis to egg-beaters", Lab on a Chip, vol. 13, no. 17, p. 3323, 2013.

[40] B. Lee, H. Yap, F. Chew, T. Quah, K. Prabhakaran, G. Chan, S. Wong and C. Seah, "Age-

and sex-related changes in lymphocyte subpopulations of healthy Asian subjects: From birth to

adulthood", Cytometry, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 8-15, 1996.

[41] P. Póvoa, "C-reactive protein: a valuable marker of sepsis", Intensive Care Med, vol. 28, no.

3, pp. 235-243, 2002.

[42] C. Stemple, H. Kwon and J. Yoon, "Rapid and Sensitive Detection of Malaria Antigen in

Human Blood With Lab-on-a-Chip", IEEE Sensors J., vol. 12, no. 9, pp. 2735-2736, 2012.

[43] Y. Choi, J. Shin, G. Sung, C. Kim and K. Chung, "Rapid agglutination of whole blood by

antiserum and its integration in a blood pretreatment module with dual function", Sensors and

Actuators B: Chemical, vol. 208, pp. 450-456, 2015.

[44] A. Wong, M. Gupta, S. Shevkoplyas and G. Whitesides, "Egg beater as centrifuge: isolating

human blood plasma from whole blood in resource-poor settings", Lab on a Chip, vol. 8, no. 12,

p. 2032, 2008.

[45] J. Shim and C. Ahn, "An on-chip whole blood/plasma separator using hetero-packed beads

at the inlet of a microchannel", Lab on a Chip, vol. 12, no. 5, p. 863, 2012.

Page 99: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

79

[46] K. Morton, K. Loutherback, D. Inglis, O. Tsui, J. Sturm, S. Chou and R. Austin, "Crossing

microfluidic streamlines to lyse, label and wash cells", Lab on a Chip, vol. 8, no. 9, p. 1448,

2008.

[47] J. Kutter, "Fatima H. Labeed and Henry O. Fatoyinbo (Eds.): Microfluidics in detection

science: lab-on-a-chip technologies", Anal Bioanal Chem, vol. 407, no. 19, pp. 5549-5550, 2015.

[48] A. Bhagat, S. Kuntaegowdanahalli and I. Papautsky, "Continuous particle separation in

spiral microchannels using dean flows and differential migration", Lab on a Chip, vol. 8, no. 11,

p. 1906, 2008.

[49] M. Warkiani, G. Guan, K. Luan, W. Lee, A. Bhagat, P. Kant Chaudhuri, D. Tan, W. Lim, S.

Lee, P. Chen, C. Lim and J. Han, "Slanted spiral microfluidics for the ultra-fast, label-free

isolation of circulating tumor cells", Lab Chip, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 128-137, 2014.

[50] A. Browne, L. Ramasamy, T. Cripe and C. Ahn, "A lab-on-a-chip for rapid blood separation

and quantification of hematocrit and serum analytes", Lab on a Chip, vol. 11, no. 14, p. 2440,

2011.

[51] M. Gong, B. MacDonald, T. Vu Nguyen, K. Van Nguyen and D. Sinton, "Field tested

milliliter-scale blood filtration device for point-of-care applications", Biomicrofluidics, vol. 7,

no. 4, p. 044111, 2013.

[52] M. Gong, B. MacDonald, T. Nguyen, K. Van Nguyen and D. Sinton, "Lab-in-a-pen: a

diagnostics format familiar to patients for low-resource settings", Lab on a Chip, vol. 14, no. 5,

p. 957, 2014.

[53] Sterlitech.com, "Membrane Selection Guide by Application", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.sterlitech.com/membrane-selection-guide-by-application/. [Accessed: 12- Jan-

2016].

[54] P. Corporation, "Principles of Filtration | Sterlitech Corporation", Sterlitech.com, 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.sterlitech.com/principles-of-filtration. [Accessed: 12- Jan-

2016].

Page 100: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

80

[55] P. Corporation, "PETE Membranes | Sterlitech Corporation", Sterlitech.com, 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.sterlitech.com/filters/membrane-disc-filters/polyester-

membrane-filters/polyester-pete-membranes.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[56] U. Specifications, "Understanding Product Specifications", Sterlitech.com, 2016. [Online].

Available: http://www.sterlitech.com/understanding-product-specifications.html. [Accessed: 12-

Jan- 2016].

[57] Beckmancoulter.com, "Select your country - Beckman Coulter, Inc. - Beckman Coulter,

Inc.", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.beckmancoulter.com/wsrportal/page/itemDetails?itemNumber=6607077.

[Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[58] Spherotech.com, "FLUORESCENT PARTICLES (Up to 5 Micron) - Spherotech", 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.spherotech.com/up_to_5.htm. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[59] . Bone, "Definitions for sepsis and organ failure and guidelines for the use of innovative

therapies in sepsis. The ACCP/SCCM Consensus Conference Committee. American College of

Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine.", CHEST Journal, vol. 101, no. 6, p. 1644,

1992.

[60] L. Husak, A. Marcuzzi, J. Herring, E. Wen, L. Yin, D. Capan and G. Cernat, "National

Analysis of Sepsis Hospitalizations and Factors Contributing to Sepsis In-Hospital Mortality in

Canada", hcq, vol. 13, no., pp. 35-41, 2010.

[61] J. Vincent and R. Moreno, "Clinical review: Scoring systems in the critically ill", Critical

Care, vol. 14, no. 2, p. 207, 2010.

[62] Chan and F. Gu, "Early diagnosis of sepsis using serum biomarkers", Expert Review of

Molecular Diagnostics, vol. 11, no. 5, pp. 487-496, 2011.

[63] C. Pierrakos and J. Vincent, "Sepsis biomarkers: a review", Critical Care, vol. 14, no. 1, p.

R15, 2010.

[64] B. Biosciences, BD Biosciences. BD Cytometric Bead Array: Multiplexed Bead-Based

Immunoassays, 1st ed. 2016.

Page 101: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

81

[65] N. Christodoulides, S. Mohanty, C. Miller, M. Langub, P. Floriano, P. Dharshan, M. Ali, B.

Bernard, D. Romanovicz, E. Anslyn, P. Fox and J. McDevitt, "Application of microchip assay

system for the measurement of C-reactive protein in human saliva", Lab on a Chip, vol. 5, no. 3,

p. 261, 2005.

[66] E. Kulla, J. Chou, G. Simmons, J. Wong, M. McRae, R. Patel, P. Floriano, N.

Christodoulides, R. Leach, I. Thompson and J. McDevitt, "Enhancement of performance in

porous bead-based microchip sensors: effects of chip geometry on bio-agent capture", RSC Adv.,

vol. 5, no. 60, pp. 48194-48206, 2015.

[67] Polysciences.com, "Polyballs - Polyamide 6/6 (Nylon), 1/16" Diameter", 2016. [Online].

Available: http://www.polysciences.com/default/catalog-products/microspheres-

particles/polymer-microspheres/polymer-microspheres/polyballs-polyamide-66-nylon-116-

diameter/. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[68] Hartfordtechnologies.com, "Plastic Balls, Nylon Balls, Delrin Balls", 2016. [Online].

Available: http://www.hartfordtechnologies.com/plastic-balls.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[69] Essentialchemicalindustry.org, "Polyamides", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.essentialchemicalindustry.org/polymers/polyamides.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[70] G. Judy, "Effective Blocking Procedures", Corning, 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://www.cultek.com/inf/otros/soluciones/ELISA_tapizado.pdf. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[71] A. Gardas and A. Lewartowska, "Coating of proteins to polystyrene ELISA plates in the

presence of detergents", Journal of Immunological Methods, vol. 106, no. 2, pp. 251-255, 1988.

[72 ] Invitrogen.com, "Phycobiliproteins", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://tools.thermofisher.com/content/sfs/manuals/mp00800.pdf. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[73] Zeiss-campus.magnet.fsu.edu, "ZEISS Microscopy Online Campus | Microscopy Basics |

Fluorescence Microscopy", 2016. [Online]. Available: http://zeiss-

campus.magnet.fsu.edu/articles/basics/fluorescence.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[74] Thermofisher.com, "Antibody Structure and Classes | Thermo Fisher Scientific", 2016.

[Online]. Available: https://www.thermofisher.com/ca/en/home/life-science/protein-

Page 102: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

82

biology/protein-biology-learning-center/protein-biology-resource-library/pierce-protein-

methods/antibody-structure-classes.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[75] Bangslab.com, "Adsorption to Microspheres", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.bangslabs.com/sites/default/files/imce/docs/TechNote%20204%20Web.pdf.

[Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[76] M. Bale, S. Danielson, J. Daiss, K. Goppert and R. Sutton, "Influence of copolymer

composition on protein adsorption and structural rearrangements at the polymer

surface", Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, vol. 132, no. 1, pp. 176-187, 1989.

[77] M. Brusatori, Y. Tie and P. Van Tassel, "Protein Adsorption Kinetics under an Applied

Electric Field: An Optical Waveguide Lightmode Spectroscopy Study", Langmuir, vol. 19, no.

12, pp. 5089-5097, 2003.

[78] N. Biolabs, "Streptavidin | NEB", Neb.com, 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.neb.com/products/n7021-streptavidin. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[79] Thermofisher.com, "R-Phycoerythrin, Biotin-XX Conjugate - Thermo Fisher Scientific",

2016. [Online]. Available: https://www.thermofisher.com/order/catalog/product/P811.

[Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[80] M. Balcells, D. Klee, M. Fabry and H. Höcker, "Quantitative Assessment of Protein

Adsorption by Combination of the Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay with Radioisotope-

Based Studies",Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, vol. 220, no. 2, pp. 198-204, 1999.

[81] Shop.hytest.fi, "C-reactive protein (CRP) Antibodies - HyTest Web Store", 2016. [Online].

Available: https://shop.hytest.fi/t/product-category/monoclonal-antibodies/cardiac-markers/c-

reactive-protein-crp. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[82] Chipcare.ca, "Chipcare Corporation", 2016. [Online]. Available: http://www.chipcare.ca.

[Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[83] World Health Organization, "Progress report 2011: Global HIV/AIDS response", 2011.

[Online]. Available: http://www.who.int/hiv/pub/progress_report2011/en/. [Accessed: 12- Jan-

2016].

Page 103: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

83

[84] M. Haleyur Giri Setty and I. Hewlett, "Point of Care Technologies for HIV", AIDS

Research and Treatment, vol. 2014, pp. 1-20, 2014.

[85] WHO, "Towards universal access: scaling up priority HIV/AIDS interventions in the health

sector: progress report, April 2007", 2007. [Online]. Available:

http://www.who.int/hiv/mediacentre/universal_access_progress_report_en.pdf. [Accessed: 12-

Jan- 2016].

[86] Who.int, "WHO | Low-cost tools for diagnosing and monitoring HIV infection in low-

resource settings", 2012. [Online]. Available: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/90/12/12-

102780/en/. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[87] R. Zachariah, S. Reid, P. Chaillet, M. Massaquoi, E. Schouten and A. Harries, "Viewpoint:

Why do we need a point-of-care CD4 test for low-income countries?", Tropical Medicine &

International Health, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 37-41, 2010.

[88] Parisi, MR, L. Soldini, G. Di Perri, S. Tiberi, A. Lazzarin, and FB Lillo. "Offer of Rapid

Testing and Alternative Biological Samples as Practical Tools to Implement HIV Screening

Programs.", New Microbiologica, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 391-96, 2009.

[89] B. Branson, "The Future of HIV Testing", JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency

Syndromes, vol. 55, pp. S102-S105, 2010.

[91] G. Beelaert and K. Fransen, "Evaluation of a rapid and simple fourth-generation HIV

screening assay for qualitative detection of HIV p24 antigen and/or antibodies to HIV-1 and

HIV-2",Journal of Virological Methods, vol. 168, no. 1-2, pp. 218-222, 2010.

[92]C. . Bentsen, L. McLaughlin, E. Mitchell, C. Ferrera, S. Liska, R. Myers, S. Peel, P.

Swenson, S. Gadelle and M. Shriver, "Performance evaluation of the Bio-Rad Laboratories GS

HIV Combo Ag/Ab EIA, a 4th generation HIV assay for the simultaneous detection of HIV p24

antigen and antibodies to HIV-1 (groups M and O) and HIV-2 in human serum or

plasma", Journal of Clinical Virology, vol. 52, pp. S57-S61, 2011.

[93] V. Greengrass, M. Plate, P. Steele, J. Denholm, C. Cherry, L. Morris, A. Hearps and S.

Crowe, "Evaluation of the Cavidi ExaVir Load Assay (Version 3) for Plasma Human

Page 104: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

84

Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Load Monitoring", Journal of Clinical Microbiology, vol. 47,

no. 9, pp. 3011-3013, 2009.

[94] S. Sivapalasingam, S. Essajee, P. Nyambi, V. Itri, B. Hanna, R. Holzman and F. Valentine,

"Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Reverse Transcriptase Activity Correlates with HIV

RNA Load: Implications for Resource-Limited Settings", Journal of Clinical Microbiology, vol.

43, no. 8, pp. 3793-3796, 2005.

[95] P. Chavez, L. Wesolowski, P. Patel, K. Delaney and S. Owen, "Evaluation of the

performance of the Abbott ARCHITECT HIV Ag/Ab Combo Assay", Journal of Clinical

Virology, vol. 52, pp. S51-S55, 2011.

[96] W. Labbett, A. Garcia-Diaz, Z. Fox, G. Clewley, T. Fernandez, M. Johnson and A. Geretti,

"Comparative Evaluation of the ExaVir Load Version 3 Reverse Transcriptase Assay for

Measurement of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Plasma Load", Journal of Clinical

Microbiology, vol. 47, no. 10, pp. 3266-3270, 2009.

[97] Daktaridx.com, "Daktari Diagnostics, Inc.", 2016. [Online]. Available:

http://daktaridx.com/. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016]. [95] “A smart connected road to health” Alere

Web 5. Jan. 2015

[98] Zeiss-campus.magnet.fsu.edu, "ZEISS Microscopy Online Campus | Microscopy Basics |

Fluorescence Microscopy", 2016. [Online]. Available: http://zeiss-

campus.magnet.fsu.edu/articles/basics/fluorescence.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[99] Microscopyu.com, "Nikon MicroscopyU | Fluorescence Microscopy | Introduction", 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.microscopyu.com/articles/fluorescence/fluorescenceintro.html.

[Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[100] Stelray.com, "Reference Tables - Ansonia, Connecticut - Stelray Plastic Products", 2016.

[Online]. Available: http://www.stelray.com/reference-tables.html. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

[101] Thorlabs.com, "Lens Tube Systems - Thorlabs", 2016. [Online]. Available:

https://www.thorlabs.com/navigation.cfm?guide_id=74. [Accessed: 12- Jan- 2016].

Page 105: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

85

Appendix A: Solidworks Drawings

Figure 7:1 Drawing of the 3D printed Membrane Filter Holder from Chapter 3 with 0.5

mm capillaries in the middle

Page 106: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

86

Figure 7:2: The cap for filter membrane holder for the sample preparation from chapter 3

Page 107: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

87

Figure 7:3: Design 1 for holding the Nylon beads from Chapter 4

Page 108: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

88

Figure 7:4 Design 1 Bead Well Cover (from Chapter 4)

Page 109: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

89

Figure 7:5 Design 2 for holding the Nylon beads from Chapter 4, there is a drainage

channel of 1 mm width below the bead well.

Page 110: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

90

Figure 7:6 Design 2: The cover for the bead well for the bead based assay in Chapter 4.

Page 111: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

91

The following files are from Chapter 5:

Figure 7:7 3D printed base for the xyz translation stage holding the Optical Tubes in

Chapter 5

Page 112: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

92

Figure 7:8 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed Optical Tube Holder

Page 113: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

93

Figure 7:9 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed holder for the z translation stage for the

Laser

Page 114: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

94

Figure 7:10 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed adapter from the Rotary stage to the

translation stage

Page 115: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

95

Figure 7:11 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for inserting the laser

Page 116: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

96

Figure 7:12 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for enclosing the laser. The screw

holes are M2 and they pass straight through to the Rotart stage

Page 117: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

97

Figure 7:13 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that holds both the new cartridge

and the stepper motor.

Page 118: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

98

Figure 7:14 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for holding the black cartridge and

sliding it into the main Cartridge Holder module

Page 119: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

99

Figure 7:15 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part for holding the Resuspension

cartridge and sliding it into the base

Page 120: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

100

Figure 7:16 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that supports the PCB and has a

groove that slides into the base

Page 121: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

101

Figure 7:17 Solidworks drawing of the 3D printed part that connects the Optical bench to

the Cartridge Holder module

Page 122: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

102

Appendix B: COMSOL Simulation for Chapter 3

An example COMSOL setup is described below for a helical geometry imported from

Solidworks using the LiveLink feature. Since COMSOL, does not have an inbuilt model for

representing blood, simulating particle flowing water was performed. The simulation would

involve using the Laminar Flow and the Particle Tracing capabilities. The Laminar Flow Physics

is solved first by performing a time-dependant study to obtain the flow profile (velocity,

pressure, etc). Then, Particle Tracing Physics will be added and another time-dependant Study

will be performed, but with the results from the previous study as the input conditions. The

parameters corresponding to each study are listed below:

Geometry 1

Geometry 1

Units

Length unit mm

Angular unit deg

Geometry statistics

Page 123: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

103

Property Value

Space dimension 3

Number of domains 1

Number of boundaries 16

Number of edges 34

Number of vertices 20

Laminar Flow (spf)

Laminar Flow

Selection

Geometric entity level Domain

Selection Domain 1

Page 124: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

104

Equations

Settings

Description Value

Discretization of fluids P1 + P1

Value type when using splitting of complex

variables

{Real, Real, Real, Real, Real, Real, Real,

Real, Real}

Neglect inertial term (Stokes flow) Off

Properties from material

Property Material Property group

Density Water, liquid Basic

Dynamic viscosity Water, liquid Basic

Wall 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Boundary

Selection Boundaries 2–4, 6–15

Page 125: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

105

Equations

Settings

Settings

Description Value

Temperature User defined

Temperature 293.15[K]

Electric field User defined

Electric field {0, 0, 0}

Boundary condition No slip

Apply reaction terms on Individual dependent variables

Use weak constraints Off

Inlet 1

Page 126: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

106

Inlet 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Boundary

Selection Boundary 16

Equations

Settings

Settings

Description Value

Apply reaction terms on All physics (symmetric)

Use weak constraints Off

Boundary condition Velocity

Velocity field componentwise Normal inflow velocity

Page 127: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

107

Description Value

Normal inflow velocity 1

Standard pressure 1[atm]

Standard molar volume 0.0224136[m^3/mol]

Normal mass flow rate 1e-5[kg/s]

Mass flow type Mass flow rate

Standard flow rate defined by Standard density

Outlet 1

Outlet 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Boundary

Page 128: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

108

Selection Boundaries 1, 5

Equations

Settings

Settings

Description Value

Boundary condition Pressure

Pressure 0

Normal flow Off

Suppress backflow On

Apply reaction terms on All physics (symmetric)

Use weak constraints Off

Particle Tracing for Fluid Flow (fpt)

Page 129: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

109

Particle Tracing for Fluid Flow

Selection

Geometric entity level Domain

Selection Domain 1

Equations

Settings

Description Value

Formulation Newtonian

Relativistic correction Off

Maximum number of secondary particles 10000

Page 130: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

110

Description Value

Store particle status data Off

Release type Transient

Compute particle temperature Off

Compute particle mass Off

Wall accuracy order 1

Settings

Description Value

Wall condition Bounce

Primary particle condition None

Include secondary emission Off

Particle Properties

Settings

Description Value

Charge number 0

Particle density 1100[kg/m^3]

Particle diameter 50E-6[m]

Page 131: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

111

Description Value

Particle properties 0

Particle property specification Specify particle density and diameter

Inlet 1

Inlet 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Boundary

Selection Boundary 16

Equations

Settings

Settings

Page 132: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

112

Description Value

Release times 0

Initial position Density

Number of particles per release 10000

Density proportional to spf.U

Initial velocity Expression

Velocity field Velocity field (spf/fp1)

Outlet 1

Outlet 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Boundary

Page 133: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

113

Selection Boundaries 1, 5

Settings

Description Value

Wall condition Freeze

Drag Force 1

Drag Force 1

Selection

Geometric entity level Domain

Selection Domain 1

Equations

Page 134: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

114

Settings

Settings

Description Value

Turbulent dispersion Off

Drag law Stokes

Velocity field Velocity field (spf/fp1)

Dynamic viscosity Dynamic viscosity (spf/fp1)

Turbulent kinetic energy User defined

Turbulent kinetic energy 0

Mesh 1

Mesh statistics

Property Value

Minimum element quality 0.05607

Average element quality 0.5872

Tetrahedral elements 42338

Pyramid elements 156

Prism elements 12260

Triangular elements 7142

Quadrilateral elements 276

Page 135: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

115

Property Value

Edge elements 990

Vertex elements 20

Mesh 1

Size (size)

Settings

Name Value

Calibrate for Fluid dynamics

Maximum element size 1.47

Minimum element size 0.44

Curvature factor 0.6

Page 136: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

116

Name Value

Resolution of narrow regions 0.7

Maximum element growth rate 1.15

Study 1

Stationary Study settings

Property Value

Include geometric nonlinearity Off

Mesh selection

Geometry Mesh

Geometry 1 (geom1) mesh1

Physics selection

Physics Discretization

Laminar Flow (spf) physics

Fully Coupled 1 (fc1)

General

Page 137: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

117

Name Value

Linear solver Iterative 1

Iterative 1 (i1)

Error

Name Value

Factor in error estimate 20

Maximum number of iterations 200

Nonlinear based error norm On

Multigrid 1 (mg1)

Coarse Solver (cs)

Direct 1 (d1)

General

Name Value

Solver PARDISO

Study 2

Time Dependent Study settings

Page 138: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

118

Property Value

Include geometric nonlinearity Off

Times: range(0,0.01,0.2)

Mesh selection

Geometry Mesh

Geometry 1 (geom1) mesh1

Physics selection

Physics Discretization

Particle Tracing for Fluid Flow (fpt) physics

Time-Dependent Solver 1 (t1)

General

Name Value

Defined by study step Time Dependent

Time {0, 0.01, 0.02, 0.03, 0.04, 0.05, 0.06, 0.07, 0.08, 0.09, 0.1, 0.11,

0.12, 0.13, 0.14, 0.15, 0.16, 0.17, 0.18, 0.19, 0.2}

Relative tolerance 1.0E-5

Page 139: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

119

Absolute tolerance

Name Value

Tolerance 1.0E-6

Time stepping

Name Value

Method Generalized alpha

Page 140: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

120

Appendix C: Streptavidin and CRP adsorption recipes (Chapter 4)

Table 9-1 Qualitative Assay for detecting Streptavidin on Nylon beads

Streptavidin coated bead Control bead with no Streptavidin

1) 1 ul of Streptavidin in 14 ul PBS

Buffer to dilute 15x. Stir

2) Wash beads and drain PBS buffer in

20 ul

3) Add the Streptavidin solution onto the

beads and incubate overnight.

4) Dilute 1 % BSA into 0.1% by mixing

5 ul of BSA with 45 ul of buffer.

5) Pour 20 ul of that mixture into the

beads (This blocks the unused STV

binding sites on the bead)

6) Incubate for 1 hour in the fridge

7) 2 ul Biotin (4mg/ml) was taken and

mixed with 8 ul of BSA to bring it up

to volume

8) Then 4 ul of this stock was added to

the Streptavidin-coated beads

9) Incubate for 15 mins with occasional

mixing. Drain the solution

10) Add 0.1% BSA volume up to 15 ul

11) Repeatedly wash the beads to ensure

there isn’t any PE-Biotin left

12) Image it

Add 15 ul of PBS onto the beads and incubate

overnight.

Pour 20 ul of that mixture onto Control beads

Incubate for an hour in the fridge

4 ul of this stock was added to Control

Incubate for 15 mins with occasional mixing

Drain the solution

Repeatedly wash the beads to ensure there

isn’t any PE-Biotin left

Image it

Page 141: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

121

Table 9-2 Quantitative assay for fluorescent detection of Streptavidin on Nylon bead

Streptavidin coated beads Control beads

Streptavidin (0.66, 1.33, 2, 2.66, 3.33, 5,

6.67, 8.33, 10, 13 pico moles)

5 ul of 5%BSA

Incubate overnight Incubate Overnight

Pipette out the old sol Pipette out the old sol

5 ul of 2.5%BSA 5 ul of 2.5%BSA

Incubate few hours Incubate few hours

Pipette out the old sol, change vials Pipette out the old sol, change

vials

Biotin-PE (66 pmoles) 4 ul of 4mg/ml Biotin-PE (66

pmoles)

Incubate 2 hours Incubate 2 hours

change vials change vials

Twice add 20 ul and pipette out Twice add 20 ul and pipette out

Image Image

Page 142: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

122

Table 9-3 Direct (Non-specific) Adsorption procedure for detecting CRP on Nylon Beads

Beads with CRP Control Beads

CRP (0.32, 0.64, 1.28 nano moles) Just 10 ul of 5% BSA

Incubate @25 C overnight Incubate @25 C overnight

Pipette out the old sol, add 20 ul PBS and

pipette out again

Pipette out the old sol, add 20 ul PBS and

pipette out again

Add 10 ul of 5% BSA Add 10 ul of 5% BSA

Incubate @25 C overnight Incubate @25 C overnight

Pipette out the old sol, change vials, add PBS

and pipette out

Pipette out the old sol, change vials, add PBS

and pipette out

Add 3 ul C2 antibody Add 3 ul C2 antibody

Incubate overnight Incubate overnight

Wash with 10 ul PBS Wash with 10 ul PBS

Add 12.5 pico moles Secondary Ab Goat

Anti-Mouse IgG1

Add 12.5 pico moles Secondary Ab Goat

Anti-Mouse IgG4

Incubate few hours Incubate few hours

Pipette out the old sol, change vials Pipette out the old sol, change vials

add 20 ul PBS and pipette out again add 20 ul PBS and pipette out again

Image Image

Page 143: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

123

Table 9-4 Sandwich assay for CRP detection with coating of antibody C6 on Nylon bead

Beads with capture antibody (C6) Control bead with no capture antibody

Monoclonal Antibody C6 (19 pmoles) 5 ul of 5% BSA

Incubate @25 C overnight Incubate @25 C overnight

Pipette out the old sol Pipette out the old sol

Add CRP (0.4, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 pmoles) Add CRP (8 pmoles)

Incubate overnight Incubate overnight

Pipette out the old sol, Add 5 ul of 2.5% BSA

and incubate for an hour

Pipette out the old sol, Add 5 ul of 2.5% BSA

and incubate for an hour

Pipette out the old sol, add PBS and pipette

out, change vials

Pipette out the old sol, add PBS and pipette

out, change vials

Add monoclonal antibody C2 (0.66, 1.9, 3.8,

6.6, 12.2, 20.6 pmoles)

Add 5 ul of 62 ug/ml C2 antibody (1.9

pmoles)

Incubate 1.5 hours Incubate 1.5 hours

Pipette out old, Wash with 10 ul PBS, change

vials

Pipette out old, Wash with 10 ul PBS, change

vials

Add detection antibody Goat Anti-Mouse

IgG1 (0.625, 2, 3.125, 6.25, 12.5, 25 pmoles)

Add 15 ul of 100 ug/ml Secondary Ab Goat

Anti-Mouse IgG1 (12.5 pmoles)

Incubate 1.5 hours Incubate 1 hours

Pipette out the old sol, change vials Pipette out the old sol, change vials

add 20 ul PBS and pipette out again add 20 ul PBS and pipette out again

Image Image

Page 144: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

124

Appendix D: 3D Printing tips

The author is experienced in using the Form1+ Stereolithography-based resin printer and the

Fusion-Deposition-Modelling (FDM) based ABS plastic printer (Zortrax M200). Techniques to

achieve the best results while printing are summarized below:

Zortrax M200 is a Fusion Deposition Modelling (FDM) printer where objects are created out of a

thermoplastic material. This printer uses a proprietary version of the Acrylo Butadiene Styrene

(ABS) called Z-ABS which has a higher melting point (260 C) than other commercially available

ABS. The filament diameter is 1.75 mm. The best vertical z resolution is 90 µm meaning the

thinnest layers are 90 µm. The xy resolution is limited by the size of the nozzle, which is 0.4

mm. The basic procedure to use the printer is as follows:

The user converts their CAD model from either a .stl, .dxf or an .obj format to z-code by using

the proprietary meshing software Z-Suite. The software also allows the user to orient, scale or

split the model into sections. The meshing is done automatically after the user selects the

resolution, material type, infill (density), and support angle needed for the print.

Figure 10:1 User interface for the Zortrax M200

Page 145: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

125

During the course of the thesis, the following conditions were optimized and issues resolved. The

printing time is inversely proportional to both the resolution and infill. A poor resolution of 0.29

mm compromised the strength of the material due to adjacent layers being deposited further

apart. Conversely, a high resolution (0.090 mm) gives a relatively smooth exterior indicating the

layers are packed closer at the cost of time. It was found that 0.19 mm resolution and medium

infill gives the optimum tradeoff between speed, strength and aesthetics. For models with small

holes, it is recommended that the “hole offset” option be set as 0.2 mm to account for shrinking

post-printing.

After the printing is complete, the supporting material has to be peeled off from the part. To

enable easier removal, it is recommended to use “Support Lite” with the “Angle” option set at 20

degrees. Since better resolution is available in the z-axis compared to the xy, the part can be

oriented such that the most dimension-sensitive areas are printed vertically.

Warping:

ABS expands upon heating and contracts during the cooling step. This causes the entire part to

shrink slightly. However, the corners of the base tend to cool faster resulting in the corner

sections peeling off from the build platform during the printing causing uneven print jobs. This

uneven shrinkage is termed as warping and is the major cause of failure when printing parts with

a rectangular footprint. To solve this issue, several methods can be adopted:

1) The cooling fan can be turned off

2) The build platform can be coated with a layer of Acetone/office glue prior to starting the print

3) The room can be kept at a warmer temperature/minimizing airflow

4) Enclosing the printer to trap the heat

5) The perforated plate can be taken out and bent inwards before the start of the print

6) The build platform can be sanded to achieve better adhesion and

Page 146: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

126

7) Letting the part cool down slowly after printing by allowing it to remain in the printer for 30

more minutes.

Even with all these steps, large parts often fail. To work around this issue, it was discovered that

surrounding the part with sacrificial pieces caused the latter to warp, thereby protecting the

model at the center as illustrated below:

Figure 10:2 The desired model in the middle protected by sacrificial rods of arbitrary

dimensions

Other issues, their potential causes and general techniques are listed below:

Stuck Filaments: If the filament is not extruding from the nozzle, then go to user menu

“filaments” -> “unload filaments” and then allow it to heat. The heating will melt any stuck

pieces. Then the gear bit will rotate anti-clockwise to push the top part of the filament upwards.

Remove the filament. Then press load filament. Then push the filament back in and follow the

usual procedure to load the filament. If these steps fail, the nozzle can be cleaned by detaching it

and dipping it for a few hours in Acetone.

Page 147: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

127

Knotty filaments: During the print job, if the filament appears knotted, it is because there is a

slack in the filament spool.

Noise: After several months of usage, it is necessary to grease the rods to keep them moving

smoothly. However if the stop screw has fallen off, extremely loud noise will be heard from the

printer. It is unsafe to use it until the screw is bolted back in.

Smoothening the Surface: To obtain a glossy surface finishing, the printed part can be covered

under a jar with acetone vapors. The acetone dissolves the surface and causes a smooth finish.

The top two [35] 3D printers under $5k are compared below along with their estimated cost of

usage.

Figure 10:3 Price comparison for top 3D printers [37, 38]. Assuming that printers last just

one year, the above table gives a rough estimate of the costs involved in using these two 3D

printers.

Form 1+

Cost Per Unit

Resin [1 year supply]

Resin Tanks [1 year supply]

Build Platform

Isopropyl Alcohol

Shipping and Taxes

Total:

Man-hours (100 hours * $20)

Zortax M200

Cost Per Unit

ABS Filament [1 year supply]

Nozzles [3 * $35]

Hot End [2 * $90]

Build Plate [5 * $45]

Shipping and Taxes

Total:

Man-hours (30 hours * $20)

(UV Laser cures liquid resin)

(High temperature melts plastic, then solidifies)

Average Cost per print: $35

$230.00

$500.00

$3,355.00

$600.00

Build Volume : 200 x 200 x 185 mm

Failure Rate: N/A

Z Resolution: 100 um

XY Resolution: 400 um

Technology: Filament Extrusion

Cost in USD

$1,990.00

$350.00

$105.00

$180.00

$500.00

$6,033.00

$2,000.00

Average Cost per print: $50

Failure Rate: 30%

XY Resolution: 25 um

Build Volume : 125 x 125 x 165 mm

Z Resolution: 25 um

Technology: Stereo Lithography

$250.00

3D Printer price comparison

Cost in USD

$3,300.00

$1,490.00

$295.00

$198.00

Page 148: 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care ... · PDF fileii 3D Printing and Assay Development for Point-of-Care Applications Shreesha Jagadeesh Masters of Applied Science

128

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man

stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs

to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood,

who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no

effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great

devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the

triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while

daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew

neither victory nor defeat.” – Theodore Roosevelt