Lab-on-a-chip technologies for minimally invasive molecular sensing of diabetic retinopathy.

International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory (INL), Braga, Portugal. Coimbra Institute for Clinical and Biomedical Research (iCBR), Faculty of Medicine, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal. Center for Innovative Biomedicine and Biotechnology (CIBB), University of Coimbra, Portugal. Clinical Academic Center of Coimbra (CACC), Coimbra, Portugal. Association for Innovation and Biomedical Research on Light and Image, Coimbra, Portugal. CMEMS-UMinho, University of Minho, Campus of Azurém, Guimarães, Portugal. LABBELS - Associate Laboratory, Guimarães, Braga, Portugal. Spin Dynamics in Health Engineering Group, Songshan Lake Materials Laboratory, Dongguan, China. Institute for Research and Innovation in Health (i3S), Porto, Portugal. migueln@i3s.up.pt.

Lab on a chip. 2022;(10):1876-1889

Abstract

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the most common diabetic eye disease and the worldwide leading cause of vision loss in working-age adults. It progresses from mild to severe non-proliferative or proliferative DR based on several pathological features including the magnitude of blood-retinal barrier breakdown and neovascularization. Available pharmacological and retinal laser photocoagulation interventions are mostly applied in the advanced stages of DR and are inefficient in halting disease progression in a significantly high percentage of patients. Yet, recent evidence has shown that some therapies could potentially limit DR progression if applied at early stages, highlighting the importance of early disease diagnostics. In the past few decades, different imaging modalities have proved their utility for examining retinal and optic nerve changes in patients with retinal diseases. However, imaging based-methodologies solely rely on morphological examination of the retinal vascularization and are not suitable for recurrent and personalized patient evaluation. This raises the need for new technologies to enable accurate and early diagnosis of DR. In this review, we critically discuss the potential clinical benefit of minimally-invasive molecular biomarker identification and profiling of diabetic patients who are at risk of developing DR. We provide a comparative overview of conventional and recently developed lab-on-a-chip technologies for quantitative assessment of potential DR molecular biomarkers and discuss their advantages, current limitations and challenges for future practical implementation and continuous patient monitoring at the point-of-care.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Review

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