Alex DownsAdam BolotskyBryan WeaverHaley BennettNathan WolffRonen PolskyPhilip R. Miller
Microneedle sensors could enable minimally-invasive, continuous molecular monitoring - informing on disease status and treatment in real-time. Wearable sensors for pharmaceuticals, for example, would create opportunities for treatments personalized to individual pharmacokinetics. Here, we demonstrate a commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) approach for microneedle sensing using an electrochemical aptamer-based sensor that detects the high-toxicity antibiotic, vancomycin. Wearable monitoring of vancomycin could improve patient care by allowing targeted drug dosing within its narrow clinical window of safety and efficacy. To produce sensors, we miniaturize the electrochemical aptamer-based sensors to a microelectrode format, and embed them within stainless steel microneedles (sourced from commercial insulin pen needles). The microneedle sensors achieve quantitative measurements in body-temperature undiluted blood. Further, the sensors effectively maintain electrochemical signal within porcine skin. This COTS approach requires no cleanroom fabrication or specialized equipment, and produces individually-addressable, sterilizable microneedle sensors capable of easily penetrating the skin. In the future, this approach could be adapted for multiplexed detection, enabling real-time monitoring of a range of biomarkers.
Alex DownsPhil MillerBryan WeaverRonen PolskyHailey MonteithNathan Wolff
Xin LiuWang LiXiahong XuJiang ZhouZhou Nie
Pin-Ju ChiangXinjie LinSoo Hyeon ShinYajun WengHung-Ming ChenYen-Ting WuYou‐Yin ChenHao ChenLi-Huan ChenTa-Chung Liu
Yao Wu (598978)Beksultan Midinov (6278174)Ryan J. White (205521)