- 4 IBBME Faculty and their Co-Inventors Named UofT Inventors of the Year
- Science Rendezvous 2013
- IBBME Summer positions available
- IBBME's Annual Scientific Day Wows Students, Companies, with Professional Turn
- IBBME student teams take the lead in OCE 3-minute video competition
- Fast, cheap method of diagnosing infectious disease could one day be a game-changer
- Bring Your Daughter or Son To Work Day 2013 Visits IBBME
- IBBME Community Leaders Recognized
- Engineering Global Health Symposium Puts Spotlight on Health Strategies and Products
- IBBME's José Zariffa named one of Toronto's Big Thinkers
- Medicine Meets MacGuyver
- NSERC CREATE rehabilitation training program is accepting applications for Summer 2013
- IBBME welcomes Jose Zariffa to faculty
- Undergraduate BME poster session to highlight student innovation
- Engineering Global Health - April 22nd
- Spreading the Word
- Federal government invests $18.7 million in U of T research
- A rotating stage for a microscope. Software to control a mobility-assistance device…. Have a problem? Solve it with student power.
- New IBBME-led company SpineSonics Medical Inc. spins towards commercialization
- Keeping the Knives Sharp
- IBBME is redesigning its website! Have your say!
- Pour, Shake and Stir
- Milica Radisic, Tom Chau join IBBME's Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee recipients
- ‘It’s such a high-risk medication’: Researchers uncover potential errors in chemotherapy use at Canadian hospitals
- U of T Leads in National Science Awards
- Q & A with Warren Chan, Global Leader in Nanotechnology
- Q & A with Paul Santerre, Winner of the NSERC Synergy Award
- Recent Staff Changes - February 2013
- Game On!
- Can a smart phone save lives?
- Insception, largest cord blood bank in Canada, joins CCRM Consortium
- Nanomedicine: Big Potential for Small Products
- U of T faculty, alumni to receive Order of Ontario
- Connaught Fund injects more than $1 million into U of T research
- CFI Funding Prizes for New Professors’ Laboratory Equipment Translates to Greater Potential for Scientific Exploration
- University of Toronto developing revolutionary skin-printing machine
- A 3-D machine that prints skin? - [Video]
- Paying It Forward
- U of T Undergrad Takes Sunnybrook Prize with Biomaterials Discovery
- IBBME and Chemical Engineering & Applied Chemistry Professor Molly Shoichet Reaches Diamond Milestones
- IBBME Faculty Dawn Kilknenny's Tissue Engineering textbook makes U of T's noteworthy publication list for 2012
- American Association for the Advancement of Science honours four U of T researchers
- How "senior friendly" is that bistro?
- Technologies to tackle autism spectrum disorders
- Dean Catharine Whiteside Named One of Canada’s Most Powerful Women in 2012
- “Fountain of Youth” Technique Rejuvenates Aging Stem Cells
- Sonia Bot: Fire in the Belly
- Umbilical Cord Cells Outperform Bone Marrow Cells in Repairing Damaged Hearts
- Life blood: Imaging technology is helping diagnose and treat a range of medical conditions
- Second Skin
- Do patients dream of electronic doctors?
- Today's discoveries, tomorrow's cure
- Biomedical symposium features local and international talent
- Innovators & Entrepreneurs
- Fostering a Culture of Innovation
- Innovators & Entrepreneurs
- Social hearing - by design
- The Next Fifty Years
- Brain imaging wins research grant
- Innovators & Entrepreneurs
- CAHS Inducts Molly Shoichet as Fellow
- Dr. Sandra Black elected to the Royal Society of Canada (RSC)
- From the research lab to the operating room: medical device clears regulatory hurdle in the United States
- Medical apps promote patient self-care, could ease burden on health system
- "Tissue Printer" Inventor Axel Guenther Interviewed on CTV News
- Get Involved! 2012-13 BESA September Elections
- IBBME Innovators & Entrepreneurs
- IBBME Innovators & Entrepreneurs
- 'Organic' study of live pancreatic tissue yields new opportunities for diabetes research
- Recent Staff and Faculty Changes – August 2012
- Broken Heart Bioengineers Net Two McLean Awards
- Vital Signs
- Cool, Neat, DEEP
- U of T Engineering Professor Joins International Advisory Committee
- UofT PhD Student Inspires as Finalist in TED Talks 2013 Talent Search
- Recent Staff Changes - July 2012
- A (Heart) Beat Above The Competition
- Epilepsy: Seizures Preceded by a Decline in GABA Production and Release
- Navigating the Curves
- A Fond Farewell
- Nine U of T Engineers Inducted into the Canadian Academy of Engineering
- The Big "P"
- Engineering A Cure
- The $100 Artificial Leg
- With the prospect of a decline in government funding, Toronto hospitals look to private donations to improve care
- ChemE/IBBME Professor Wins CSChE’s Top Award
- 4 IBBME Profs Tapped as 2012 U of T Inventors of the Year
- An Acknowledgement of Others
- Why you want to hear about "FGF21" and "KLB"
- IBBME Innovators and Entrepreneurs
- Small and Mighty
- ScreenPlay Turns Waiting into An Art
- Bioengineering Beyond Borders
- "The harder I work, the luckier I am"
- IBBME PhD Student Balances School, Baseball Career
- A Golden Milestone for a Golden Anniversary
- Only Connect
- The Science of Fun
- New funding pledged for targeted treatments for cancer patients
- Can You Wrap Your Head Around It?
- IBBME Faculty Big Winners in 2012 NSERC Competition
- Taking Undergraduate Education to the Next Level
- Shedding New Light on Neural Imaging Research
- Growing Where No Cell Has Grown Before
- New devices provide medical breakthroughs in diagnosing
- IBBME Innovators and Entrepreneurs
- IBBME Innovators and Entrepreneurs
- IBBME Innovators and Entrepreneurs
- IBBME's Faculty Awarded New Canada Research Chair, Renews Another
- Large-scale stem cell cultivation partnership formalized
- BMES Design Competition a success
- IBBME's Jan Andrysek develops low cost artificial leg
- Tom Chau appointed Vice-President of Research and Director of the Bloorview Research Institute
- David Steinman elected ASME Fellow
- IBBME Students Present Research to Award Donor
- Molly Shoichet wins Society for Biomaterials Clemson Award
- Four IBBME researchers win Connaught Innovation Awards
- Milos Popovic Elected to the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering College of Fellows
- IBBME Faculty Honoured by American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Shana Kelley wins 2011 Steacie Prize
- Interface Biologics Inc. Announces $1-Million Investment by IAF-LS
- How does an 87-year-old walk on ice?
- IBBME research wins awards at conferences
- This House Knows When You Need Help
- IBBME Alumni and Awards Banquet 2011: An evening of celebration and expansion
- Smart implants, smart Institute
- Next-generation biomaterials developed at IBBME make catheters safer
- Joseph Cafazzo's iPhone app empowers diabetes patients
- Milos Popovic's FES therapy featured in the Globe and Mail
- FedDev Ontario funds IBBME innovations
- Digital microfluidics opening the way for revolution in blood sampling
- Discovery by U of T Researchers Could Create Retinas from “Jello”
- Province of Ontario awards IBBME researchers funding
- IBBME Profs awarded NSERC Discovery Grants and Discovery Accelerator Supplements
- Aaron Wheeler wins Analytical Chemistry 2011 Young Innovator Award
- Professor Paul Santerre Finds Success Outside of U of T
- New Coordinator for IBBME Clinical Engineering Program
- IBBME Core Faculty receive CIHR operating grants
- IBBME research journal cover-worthy
- IBBME core faculty wins Young Engineer Medal
- IBBME alum receives Pursuit Award at Holland Bloorview Kids Rehab
- Stem cell network and commercialization centre position Toronto at the forefront of regenerative medicine
- IBBME faculty win Collaborative Health Research Projects grants
- 6th Annual Ontario-on-a-Chip and 2nd Annual MATCH Symposium a success
- External reviewers impressed with Toronto Rehab Institute's research program
- Lefties a minority, hands down. But why?
- Dr. Milos R. Popovic's research team uses electrostimulation to train injured brains to do new tasks
- IBBME Core Faculty Milica Radisic achieves heart engineering breakthrough
- News Story Archive
- Science Rendezvous 2012
Digital microfluidics opening the way for revolution in blood sampling
Professor Aaron Wheeler’s lab-on-a-chip automates dried blood spot analysis in a system that is “fast, robust, precise and compatible with automation”
August 30, 2011
The days of the blood sample routine – arm out, tie tube, make a fist, find a vein, and tap in – may soon be over, thanks to a new analysis method developed at U of T by Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering (IBBME) core professor Aaron Wheeler in which only a pinprick of blood necessary.
Traditional methods of blood sampling requires intravenous extraction of several millilitres of blood. A phlebotomist then separates serum, which is frozen for transport or storage, and later thawed and analyzed. A relatively new alternative to the traditional method uses blood samples stored as dried blood spots (DBSs). The DBS method requires only a pinprick to extract a few microlitres of blood, which is blotted onto filter paper, where the sample, it has been found, remains stable. While DBSs have been gaining increasing popularity for the ease of sampling and storage for some time, they are still not a standard laboratory technique, and the process for using them remained laborious – until now.
In a study published in Lab on a Chip last week, Wheeler and colleagues demonstrated the proof-of-principle that digital microfluidics could be used to automate the process of dried blood spot analysis in the case of testing for specific genetic diseases at Newborn Screening Ontario (NSO) in Ottawa. This paper is the result of a collaboration between Wheeler and NSO rsearchers.
NSO regularly screens every baby born in Ontario for genetic diseases – some 140 000 babies a year – and collects DBS samples via heelprick. Each DBS must be manually collected. Technicians must prepare the sample for testing, put it into a centrifugal tube, pipette solvent onto the sample, extract the necessary material by centrifuge, and then use robotics to conduct the chemical analysis.
Wheeler’s digital microfluidic platform automates this process. Droplets are manipulated onto the sample using electrical signals, and the material needed for analysis is extracted – all on a “lab-on-a-chip” with little manual intervention. Wheeler created the prototype for this process in the Bahen Cleanroom, a facility of the Emerging Communications Technology Institute at U of T.
Wheeler’s study quantified particular amino acids that are markers of three metabolic disorders: phenylketonuria, homocystinuria, and tyrosinemia. His next steps will be to evaluate the rest of the 28 diseases that NSO screens for.
Wheeler’s innovation is indicative of the innovative tools for biomedical engineering that IBBME researchers create. “The applications for this process go far beyond newborn screening,” Wheeler stated. “Pharmaceutical companies are moving towards dried blood spot analysis, but they’re still lacking the tools to make widespread use feasible. We’ve demonstrated that digital microfluidics could be that tool. Our system is fast, robust, precise, and compatible with automation.”
While it might be a while before the days of the dreaded blood sample needle are behind us, Wheeler’s digital microfluidics method is the next step in moving to a DBS-based sampling system, says Pranesh Chakraborty, Director of NSO. “This approach could save considerable costs as a result of the lower volumes of reagent required,” he affirmed. “An automated system based on this approach would also process samples faster, with higher accuracy, less risk of errors, all while freeing up time for technologists to perform other work.” Charaborty’s team provided the screening and medical perspective in this research.
A patent has been filed, and Wheeler is currently exploring commercialization options.
Aaron Wheeler holds the Canada Research Chair in Bioanalytical Chemistry. He holds appointments in Chemistry, IBBME, and the Banting and Best Department of Medical Research.