Wearable Voltammetric Monitoring of Electroactive Drugs

Tech ID: 31843 / UC Case 2020-393-0

Summary

UCLA researchers in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering have developed a voltammetric wearable device capable of monitoring electroactive drug circulation and abundance in biofluids. This non-invasive monitoring system can be used for electroactive drug therapy management, drug compliance/abuse monitoring, drug-drug interaction studies, and personalized dosing.

Background

Exogenous molecules, such as drugs, remain underexplored despite studies showing circulating drugs to be partitioning in sweat more than in blood. Wearable drug monitoring devices targeting epidermally-retrievable biofluids, such as sweat, can improve drug compliance/abuse monitoring and personalize therapeutic drug dosing. Voltammetry-based approaches eliminate the reliance of the availability of recognition elements because they uniquely leverage the electroactive nature of target drug molecules. For quantification however, a sensitive voltammetric sensing interface (with high signal-to-background ratio and decoupling of the confounding effect of endogenous electroactive species and baseline variation) is needed and wireless voltammetric excitation and signal acquisition/transmission is necessary.

Innovation

UCLA researchers have developed a wearable drug monitoring system for monitoring electroactive drugs in epidermally-retrievable biofluids. The device has been successfully prototyped and used to quantify three model drugs, with nano- to sub/low-micromolar detection of the drugs using anodic-treated BDDE. The interference of five endogenous electroactive species (including uric acid and amino acids) were also investigated, resulting in an undistorted potential window within which the oxidation of target drugs can be captured sensitively and selectively. This methodology was used to establish a design space and optimize operational settings to develop a coupled sensing system and analytical framework to render sample-to-answer drug analysis.

Applications

  • Drug monitoring 
  • Drug pharmacokinetics tracking

Advantages

  • Non-invasive 
  • Fast 
  • Accurate 
  • Sensitive—high signal-to-noise ratio 
  • Broad range of substrates/drugs

State Of Development

The wearable device prototype has been tested and optimized for minimal background signal from endogenous electroactive species present in a biofluid matrix. Three model drugs have been successfully tested and detected at nano- to sub/low-micromolar levels using the anodic-treated BDDE in vitro(sweat samples).

Related Materials

Patent Status

Country Type Number Dated Case
Patent Cooperation Treaty Reference for National Filings 2021/081502 04/29/2021 2020-393
 

Patent Pending

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Inventors

  • Emaminejad, Sam

Other Information

Keywords

electroactive drug, monitoring, pharmacokinetic tracking, wearable device, voltammetric, voltammetry, sweat samples, drug monitoring

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