The high-tech Flinders University vortex fluidic device has been used to test for infectious diseases such as flu and COVID-19 within five minutes.
The speedy high-tech method of inexpensive, accurate and high-throughput protein biomarker assay testing is being touted as a much-needed development in point-of-care testing, say US and Flinders University researchers who specialise in 'green' vortex fluidic device (VFD) medical applications.
![](https://news.flinders.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Greg-Weiss-150x150.jpg)
The new method - using the revolutionary VFD developed by Flinders University - can be readily scaled up to test hundreds and 'potentially thousands' of proteins in one assay in less than 5 minutes, says senior researcher University of California, Irvine Professor Gregory Weiss, who is a US leader in VFD experiments and applications.
"Most importantly, the data produced can be accurately read with a cell phone camera - immediately addressing the gap between development and implementation of biomarker-based precision medicine."
While many costly tests can take upwards of 48-72 hours, on-the-spot tests such as this can lead to accurate diagnosis and early commencement of important drug treatments and reduction of wrong medications.
An accessible universal solution to offer on-the-spot personalised mobile testing for infectious diseases including flu and COVID-19 - or diagnosis and delivery of targeted treatments for other diseases even in remote areas - has so far been out of reach.
![](https://news.flinders.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Xuan-Luo.jpg)
"The extreme disparity between technologically lagging and advanced settings directly impacts disease mortality and morbidity, particularly for infectious diseases," says Flinders University researcher Dr Xuan Luo, a co-author in a new article on the new tech.
In the assessment published in international chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie, the new method, labelled VFD-accelerated immoblot assay (VAIA), was compared and found superior to other PoC biomarker-based tests currently in use.
Not only was the processing faster and accurate, it sliced up to 70% off the cost of sometimes toxic reagents). While many immunoblot assays are used to detect certain diseases, many are not highly sensitive and complex to use - even for technicians in a laboratory or clinical setting.
In contrast the VAIA was found to improve conventional processing time from hours to less than 5 minutes, using three major immunoassay formats with purified proteins and biofluids.
'Under-5-Minute Immunoblot Assays by Vortex Fluidic Device Acceleration' (2022) by Emily C Sanders, Sanjana R Sen, Aidan A Gelston, Alicia M Santos, Xuan Luo, Keertna Bhuvan, Derek Y Tang, Colin L Raston and Gregory A Weiss is labelled a 'Hot Paper' in top chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie (Wiley) DOI: 10.1002/ange.202202021.
Acknowledgement: This study was funded by University of California, Irvine COVID-19 Basic, Translational and Clinical Research Fund (CRAFT), the Allergan Foundation, and UCOP Emergency COVID-19 Research Seed Funding.