Test developed to detect early-stage diseases with naked eye

29 Oct 2012

1

Scientists have developed a prototype ultra-sensitive sensor that would enable doctors to detect the early stages of diseases and viruses with the naked eye, according to research published today in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

The team, from Imperial College London, report that their visual sensor technology is 10 times more sensitive than the current gold standard methods for measuring biomarkers. These indicate the onset of diseases such as prostate cancer and infection by viruses including HIV.

The researchers say their sensor would benefit countries where sophisticated detection equipment is scarce, enabling cheaper and simpler detection and treatments for patients.

In the study, the team tested the effectiveness of the sensor by detecting a biomarker called p24 in blood samples, which indicates HIV infection.

Professor Molly Stevens, from the Departments of Materials and Bioengineering at Imperial College London, says:

''It is vital that patients get periodically tested in order to assess the success of retroviral therapies and check for new cases of infection. Unfortunately, the existing gold standard detection methods can be too expensive to be implemented in parts of the world where resources are scarce. Our approach affords for improved sensitivity, does not require sophisticated instrumentation and it is ten times cheaper, which could allow more tests to be performed for better screening of many diseases.''

Latest articles

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount

China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot

China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot

Modi’s rooftop solar push slows as lenders and states drag feet

Modi’s rooftop solar push slows as lenders and states drag feet

India hosts global AI summit as tech leaders gather in Delhi amid investment push

India hosts global AI summit as tech leaders gather in Delhi amid investment push

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation