Colorimetric Detection of Azidothymidine Using an
Alkyne-Modified Dextran Substrate
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Abstract
Monitoring the adherence of patients
taking highly active antiretroviral
therapy (HAART) is a key step in treating an HIV infection, especially
in resource-limited settings in the developing world. For most regimens,
when patients are not at least 95% adherent to their drug schedule,
there is a loss of effectiveness in treatment resulting in increases
in health care costs, increases in the rate of transmission, and reduction
of positive patient outcomes. Currently, subjective methods such as
pill counting, electronic drug monitoring, and patient self-reporting
are the only ways clinicians can track adherence and intervene in
cases of noncompliance. We address this issue by developing a dipstick-based
point-of-care azide–alkyne click chemistry assay with colorimetric
read-out that directly tests for the presence of one common HAART
drug in patient urine. An alkyne-modified dextran was synthesized
and characterized by NMR and then used to colorimetrically report
the presence of azidothymidine, an azide-containing HAART drug, in
urine samples. The assay is specific to azide-containing molecules
that are not naturally present in the urine and is sensitive to physiologically
relevant urine concentrations as low as 750 uM. This point-of-care
device is a strong alternative in resource-limited settings over current
direct measurement techniques that are expensive and require trained
users such as HPLC