Microfluidic Point-of-Care Ecarin-Based Clotting and Chromogenic Assays for Monitoring Direct Thrombin Inhibitors.

Microfluidic Point-of-Care Ecarin-Based Clotting and Chromogenic Assays for Monitoring Direct Thrombin Inhibitors. J Extra Corpor Technol. 2019 Mar;51(1):29-37 Authors: Alouidor B, Sweeney RE, Tat T, Wong RK, Yoon JY Abstract Direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs), such as bivalirudin and dabigatran, have maintained steady inpatient and outpatient use as substitutes for heparin and warfarin, respectively, because of their high bioavailability and relatively safe "on-therapy" range. Current clinical methods lack the capacity to directly quantify plasma DTI concentrations across wide ranges. At present, the gold standard is the ecarin clotting time (ECT), where ecarin maximizes thrombin activity and clotting time is evaluated to assess DTIs' anticoagulation capability. This work focused on the development of a microfluidic paper analytic device (µPAD) that can quantify the extent of anticoagulation as well as DTI concentration within a patient's whole blood sample. Capillary action propels a small blood sample to flow through the nitrocellulose paper channels. Digital images of whole blood migration are then captured by our self-coded Raspberry Pi and/or the Samsung Galaxy S8 smartphone camera. Both the flow length and the blue absorbance from the plasma front on the μPAD were measured, allowing simultaneous, dual assays: ecarin clotting test (ECT) and ecarin chromogenic assay (ECA). Statistically significant (p < .05) changes in flow ...
Source: Journal of Extra-Corporeal Technology - Category: Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery Tags: J Extra Corpor Technol Source Type: research