Translational Medicine and Bioengineering Conference
Point of Care Screening of Tuberculosis from Breath Using Functionalized TiO2 Nanotube Array Sensing Platform
Authors
This work will describe a low-cost, handheld device for identifying target VOCs in exhaled breath. The device is a solid-state sensor based on metal-functionalized 3D titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanotube arrays that bind specific VOCs when a specific voltage gradient is applied. Binding results in a change in current that is proportional to the concentration of target VOCs present in the breath. The sensor has been customized to specifically bind methyl-nicotinate and methyl p-anisate and has a limit-of-detection that is several orders of magnitude below levels of the two VOCs observed to date in TB patients. Furthermore, the detection is fast (on the order of minutes), reagent-free, and requires no sample preparation. The concept of the point-of-care breath sensor device is shown in Figure 1a. Device is portable, operated using a smartphone, and can be taken directly to the patientâs home which is important for individuals that live far from medical facilities as is often the case in high TB burden countries.
Results of the sensor showed the TiO2 sensor gave a positive response to breath taken from TB positive patients and no response to breath taken from health individual controls.
Initial results of the TiO2 nanotube sensor shows a correlation between a high sensor response and TB positive patient. Site studies are currently underway in Uganda and India to establish the feasibility of using the technology in the field as a point of care screening/diagnostic device. A summary of these results will be presented.