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Microneedles for Transdermal Biosensing: Current Picture and Future Direction

A novel trend is rapidly emerging in the use of microneedles, which are a miniaturized replica of hypodermic needles with length‐scales of hundreds of micrometers, aimed at the transdermal biosensing of analytes of clinical interest, e.g., glucose, biomarkers, and others. Transdermal biosensing via...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Advanced healthcare materials 2015-12, Vol.4 (17), p.2606-2640
Main Authors: Ventrelli, Letizia, Marsilio Strambini, Lucanos, Barillaro, Giuseppe
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A novel trend is rapidly emerging in the use of microneedles, which are a miniaturized replica of hypodermic needles with length‐scales of hundreds of micrometers, aimed at the transdermal biosensing of analytes of clinical interest, e.g., glucose, biomarkers, and others. Transdermal biosensing via microneedles offers remarkable opportunities for moving biosensing technologies and biochips from research laboratories to real‐field applications, and envisages easy‐to‐use point‐of‐care microdevices with pain‐free, minimally invasive, and minimal‐training features that are very attractive for both developed and emerging countries. In addition to this, microneedles for transdermal biosensing offer a unique possibility for the development of biochips provided with end‐effectors for their interaction with the biological system under investigation. Direct and efficient collection of the biological sample to be analyzed will then become feasible in situ at the same length‐scale of the other biochip components by minimally trained personnel and in a minimally invasive fashion. This would eliminate the need for blood extraction using hypodermic needles and reduce, in turn, related problems, such as patient infections, sample contaminations, analysis artifacts, etc.The aim here is to provide a thorough and critical analysis of state‐of‐the‐art developments in this novel research trend, and to bridge the gap between microneedles and biosensors. Microneedles, a microscale replica of hypodermic needles, represent a new frontier of transdermal biosensing for analytes of clinical interest, e.g., glucose, biomarkers, and ions. The ultimate goal is microneedle‐based pain‐free and easy‐to‐use miniaturized biochips for point‐of‐care analysis, either in situ or ex situ, in transdermal bodily fluids. The current state and future direction of this novel, important, and fascinating research trend are analyzed.
ISSN:2192-2640
2192-2659
DOI:10.1002/adhm.201500450