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  5. arrow_forward_ios New international collaboration a boost for disease detection

New international collaboration a boost for disease detection

11 August 2017

For anybody who has ever anxiously waited for test results from their doctor, the latest research collaboration between the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IITM) India on point-of-care diagnostics is an eye-opener.

Professor Anil Prabhakar from IITM’s Faculty of Electrical Engineering, and Distinguished Professor Dayong Jin and Dr Matthew Arnold from UTS School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, are investigating innovative ways to aid in the development of platforms for point-of-care systems, and also to design new synthetic materials.

Point-of-care testing offers an almost instant diagnosis of disease or illness. A small portable device is used to collect samples from the patient, delivering results within minutes, saving the need to send off samples to a lab and wait days for a response.

However, point-of-care diagnostics in remote settings is an on-going challenge for developing countries and for many parts of Australia not well connected with urban centres. The collaboration will help familiarise UTS with the challenges faced by developing nations in delivering low-cost but effective healthcare.

The ARC Research Hub for Integrated Device for End-user Analysis at Low-levels (IDEAL),[DJ1] directed by Professor Jin at UTS, is a multi million dollar research initiative recently funded by the Australian Research Council, to develop portable, user-friendly point-of-care testing devices. “the key to realise this technology is to develop an effective mutual-benefit network of interdisciplinary, international and industry collaborations,” said Professor Jin, “so that to create an innovative suite of integrated technologies to vastly improve the sensitivity, selectivity, speed and cost-effectiveness of detecting biological and chemical molecules at low levels.”

The collaboration has been broadened by the discovery that some of the ideas Dr Arnold developed for artificially-structured “meta”-materials can be explored and adopted by Professor Prabhakar in India.

“With meta-materials, you take a piece of material and you structure it to give it new properties. Generally researchers have taken the easy route of structuring materials with circular holes. Instead of circular holes I have been investigating shapes somewhere between a square and a circle, which can improve the performance of these materials” Dr Arnold says.

Although Dr Arnold focuses on synthetic materials for light-based applications, that could include point-of-care diagnostics, he was also excited to learn about Professor Prabhakar's work on magnetic meta-materials which could eventually be used in high-speed communications.

“I am looking at trying to do some amount of fabrication of these devices and have Dr Arnold help with the simulations; then that becomes an additional feature that will really work to our benefit” Professor Prabhakar says.

Visiting UTS as part of the Key Technology Partnership (KTP) Visiting Fellow Program really appealed to Professor Prabhakar because he could see the value of speaking face-to-face as a quick process for sharing ideas.

Professor Jin can also see the benefits of this collaboration as a means of bringing together the international community to work collectively on an international problem.

“The best model for collaboration is to encourage either side of the collaborators to reinvent their view all the time because science is a particular language we speak between each other. The benefit due to mutual collaboration in science is really shared knowledge and technology for different applications.”

“Our current collaboration involves rethinking approaches to rapid pathogen and biomolecule detection for point-of-care diagnosis of diseases. This is an international problem and should be solved by the team of international collaborators” Professor Jin says.

For Professor Prabhakar the collaboration was an unexpected “late banquet”; he is excited for the future developments that will follow his visit to UTS.

Byline:

Adriana Zanchetta

UTS International

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UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

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