Chemists at Université de Montréal have developed "signaling cascades" made with DNA molecules to report and quantify the concentration of various molecules in a drop of blood, all within 5 minutes. Their findings, validated by experiments on mice, are published today in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, may aid efforts to build point-of-care devices for monitoring and optimizing the treatment of various diseases.
This breakthrough was made by a research group led by UdeM chemistry professor Alexis Vallée-Bélisle. “One of the key factors in successfully treating various diseases is to provide and maintain a therapeutic drug dosage throughout treatment," he said. "Sub-optimal therapeutic exposure reduces efficiency and typically leads to drug resistance, while overexposure increases side effects.”
Maintaining the right concentration of drugs in the blood remains, however, a major challenge in modern medicine. Since each patient has a distinct pharmacokinetic profile, the concentration of medications in their blood varies significantly. In chemotherapy, for example, many cancer patients do not get optimal dosage of drugs, and few or no tests are currently rapid enough to flag this issue.
“Easy-to-perform tests could make therapeutic drug monitoring more widely available and enable more personalized treatments,” said Vincent De Guire,a clinical biochemist at the UdeM-affiliated Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital and chair of the Working Group on Laboratory Errors and Patient Safety of the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine.
“A connected solution, similar to a glucometer in terms of portability, affordability, and accuracy, that would measure drug concentrations at the right time and transmit the results directly to the healthcare team would ensure that patients receive the optimal dose that maximizes their chances of recovery,” De Guire said in an independent assessment of the study.