Paper-Based RNA Extraction, <i>in Situ</i> Isothermal
Amplification, and Lateral Flow Detection for Low-Cost, Rapid Diagnosis
of Influenza A (H1N1) from Clinical Specimens
The
2009 Influenza A (H1N1) pandemic disproportionately affected
the developing world and highlighted the key inadequacies of traditional
diagnostic methods that make them unsuitable for use in resource-limited
settings, from expensive equipment and infrastructure requirements
to unacceptably long turnaround times. While rapid immunoassay diagnostic
tests were much less costly and more context-appropriate, they suffered
from drastically low sensitivities and high false negative rates.
An accurate, sensitive, and specific molecular diagnostic that is
also rapid, low-cost, and independent of laboratory infrastructure
is needed for effective point-of-care detection and epidemiological
control in these developing regions. We developed a paper-based assay
that allows for the extraction and purification of RNA directly from
human clinical nasopharyngeal specimens through a poly(ether sulfone)
paper matrix, H1N1-specific <i>in situ</i> isothermal amplification
directly within the same paper matrix, and immediate visual detection
on lateral flow strips. The complete sample-to-answer assay can be
performed at the point-of-care in just 45 min, without the need for
expensive equipment or laboratory infrastructure, and it has a clinically
relevant viral load detection limit of 10<sup>6</sup> copies/mL, offering
a 10-fold improvement over current rapid immunoassays