4.7 Review

Point-of-care electrochemical testing of biomarkers involved in inflammatory and inflammatory-associated medical conditions

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 415, Issue 6, Pages 1033-1063

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-022-04320-z

Keywords

Point-of-care testing; Biomarkers; Inflammation; Electroanalytical methods; Wearable sensors

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Recent years have shown the benefits of diagnosing and monitoring biomarkers related to inflammatory medical conditions in improving healthcare and patient life quality. The development of integrated and portable point-of-care testing devices for early disease diagnosis and monitoring, even at the patient's bed, is crucial. This review focuses on the progress in detecting specific biomarkers and inflammation-related biomarkers in various diseases and provides an overview of the latest electrochemical sensors for their detection. The future perspectives of point-of-care testing to enhance healthcare management are also discussed.
Recent years have shown that the diagnosis and monitoring of biomarkers involved in inflammatory-associated medical conditions such as cancer, neurological disorders, viral infections, or daily physical activities offer real benefits in increasing the quality of medical care and patient life quality. In this context, the use of integrated and portable platforms as point-of-care testing devices for biomedical analysis to enable early disease diagnosis and monitoring, which can be successfully used even at the patient's bed, is an emergency nowadays. The development of low-cost, miniaturized, and portable, user-friendly devices that provide an answer in a timely manner, such as electrochemical sensors, is relevant for the elaboration of point-of-care testing devices. This review focuses on the recent progress in bioanalysis of both specific biomarkers and inflammatory-associated biomarkers present in several diseases like neoplasia, severe neurological disorders, viral infections, and usual physical activity and provides an overview of the state of the art over the most recent electrochemical (bio)sensors for the detection of inflammation-related biomarkers. Future perspectives of point-of-care testing to improve healthcare management are also discussed.

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