Advertisement
Document › Details
King’s College London. (11/16/11). "Press Release: New Screening Method Developed".
![]() |
Region | London, Greater London |
| Country | United Kingdom (GB) | |
![]() |
Organisation | King’s College London |
| Group | University of London | |
| Organisation 2 | SpotOn Clinical Diagnostics Ltd. | |
![]() |
Product | dried blood spot analysis (mass spectrometry) |
| Product 2 | clinical mass spectrometry-based test | |
![]() |
Person | Dalton, Neil (Univ London 201111 Prof at King’s College London + co-founder of SpotOn Clinical Diagnostics) |
| Person 2 | Reynolds, Emma (Univ London 201111 Press Officer at King’s College London) | |
Scientists have developed a rapid method that can be used to simultaneously screen patients for a range of genetic and acquired clinical conditions from a single dried blood spot.
The test uses a highly sensitive and specific technique, known as mass spectrometry, to simultaneously analyse proteins, enzymes and metabolites in the blood, without the need for the large liquid blood samples currently used. Collection of dried blood spots is less invasive for patients and the costs and biohazards associated with sample transport, processing and storage are minimised.
Researchers at King's College London, together with clinicians from Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, as part of King's Health Partners Academic Health Sciences Centre, have built on their innovative approaches to dried blood spot screening for inherited metabolic disease and sickle cell disease in newborn babies. This approach can now be used in the early detection and clinical monitoring of chronic health problems, including kidney and heart disease and diabetes.
King's has today officially launched a spin-out company, SpotOn Clinical Diagnostics Ltd, to provide both analytical services and technical support for other clinical laboratories, many of which already have appropriate mass spectrometry instrumentation, to offer this new method.
Requiring only a drop of blood from a simple finger-prick, or heel-prick in newborns, this new blood spot analysis method has many potential applications:
o The method is faster, more specific, and cheaper than the methods currently used to screen all 750,000 babies born each year in the UK for sickle cell disease and other clinically significant haemoglobinopathies (abnormalities in haemoglobin within the blood). The current methods for ante-natal screening for sickle cell disease and thalassaemia require fresh liquid blood samples, which are more expensive to process, store and transport.
o The method has already been successfully used to provide rapid diagnosis of a comprehensive range of inherited metabolic diseases in acutely ill children admitted to intensive care with life-threatening symptoms.
o Pre-symptomatic screening for chronic health problems will introduce personalised clinical diagnostics and cost-effective early detection and monitoring of diabetes and kidney and heart disease.
Dried urine spots can also be used for the very early detection of kidney disease, particularly in patients with a high risk of developing renal complications, for example patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes.
The test works by converting proteins to peptides and then using a mass spectrometer to select and accurately measure diagnostic metabolites and/or peptides. Liquid blood and urine samples can also be screened using the method.
Compared with conventional clinical laboratory diagnostics the major advantages of the new method are that the measurements for proteins and metabolites can be done simultaneously with both high accuracy and sensitivity. Dried blood spots and/or dried urine spots offer significant cost savings in the logistics of sample collection, transport to the laboratory, sample processing, and storage.
Neil Dalton, Professor of Paediatric Biochemistry at King's, and co-founder of SpotOn, said: 'The lessons we have learned from universal pre-symptomatic screening of newborn babies using dried blood spots can now be cost-effectively applied to provide a personalised medicine approach to the early diagnosis and clinical monitoring of major chronic health problems like diabetes and kidney and heart disease.'
The two founding organisations behind SpotOn, King's College London and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, are part of King's Health Partners, one of the UK's five Academic Health Sciences Centres (AHCSs). SpotOn is an example of how academic innovation can be seamlessly translated into clinical practice and a commercial proposition. It is the result of successful collaboration between academic, clinical and commercialisation teams.
Notes to editors
For further information please contact Emma Reynolds, Press Officer at King's College London, on 0207 848 4334 or email emma.reynolds@kcl.ac.uk
SpotOn Clincial Diagnostics Limited
The company has been formed to exploit the commercial potential of patents arising from the innovative work of Neil Dalton and Charles Turner on the application of mass spectrometry for cost-effective population screening.
The method for sickle cell disease and haemoglobinopathy screening using mass spectrometry was granted an EU patent in 2010.
www.spotoncd.com
For more information on King's see our 'King's in Brief' page
Record changed: 2011-12-04 |
More documents for University of London
- [1] Agilent Technologies Inc.. (12/14/11). "Press Release: Agilent Technologies Names Gooi Soon Chai Senior Vice President, Order Fulfillment and Supply Chain". Santa Clara, CA....
- [2] AB Sciex. (2/15/11). "Press Release: The Institute of Cancer Research and AB Sciex Target the Spread of Disease Revealed through Mass Spectrometry Imaging. Collaboration to Improve and Standardize Methods for Studying Cancer Metastasis with MALDI-TOF/TOF...
- [3] Activiomics Ltd.. (3/10). "Presentation: Introduction to Activiomics. (March 2010) Non-confidential". London....
- [4] Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.. (7/20/09). "Press Release: Thermo Fisher Scientific Collaborates with The Institute of Cancer Research to Create State-of-the-Art Proteomics Laboratory. New State-of-the-Art Proteomics Laboratory Is Equipped with a Complete...
- [5] Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.. (1/31/08). "Press Release: Thermo Fisher Scientific Announces Collaborative Partnership with Vascular Proteomics Group at King’s College London"....
- [6] Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.. (1/30/08). "Press Release: New Partnership for Vascular Proteomics". San José, CA....
To subscribe to our free, monthly [MSC] Newsletter, please send an e-mail to info@iito.de and simply fill the subject line with the word »MSC newsletter«
To get even more information, please take a look at our [gs] professional services offering and read the gene-sensor Product Flyer [PDF file]
NEW: Visit our brand new forthcoming web portals Life-Sciences-Germany.com and Life-Sciences-Europe.com
» top
![[MSC] Mass-Spec-Capital.com The Mass Spectrometry Web Portal](/images/basics/msc-mass-spectrometry-portal-logo.jpg)









![Banner [iiito] Twitter iitoLifeScience Life Sciences Mass Spec 120x120px](/banner/iito-business-intelligence-20111029-120-120-twitter-iitolifescience-germany-europe-mass-spec.jpg)