Precision blood sampling

In a world where health care costs are escalating and demands on health care systems are becoming overwhelming, Trajan Scientific and Medical has announced the hemaPENTM, a prototype blood collection and storage device.

Harnessing the benefits of Dried Blood Spot (DBS) sampling in an intuitive and safe portable format, hemaPEN has the potential to change the way individuals have their blood tested - eliminating the need to visit a clinic and offering precision blood sampling with the click of a button via its familiar pen design, which can be easily used by anyone including the young, elderly and people with disabilities.

The hemaPEN is the only device of its kind in the world that allows people to collect an uncontaminated and precise volume of their own blood from the fingertip at home, eliminating the need to travel to a medical clinic – not only saving time, but the superior ready-to-use DBS sample enables the laboratory to deliver more definitive test results.

After a simple finger prick, hemaPEN can be used to collect an accurate microsample of blood, placed in the mail and analysed by a laboratory – avoiding the often overwhelming load on clinics to take blood samples and alleviating stress for the patient.

hemaPEN is the first product concept from ASTech, the ARC Training Centre for Portable Analytical Separation Technologies – a $5.2m programme part funded by the Australian Research Council (ARC), University of Tasmania (UTAS) and Trajan – and has huge potential to benefit to a range of disease screening including diabetes, therapeutic drug monitoring and medical research. 

hemaPEN is the result of research and investigation by ASTech Post-doctoral Research Fellow from UTAS, Dr Florian Lapierre, who holds a PhD in Micro and Nanotechnology in the field of sophisticated microfluidic device design, a Master of Science and Technology in microfluidic systems and a Master of Engineering in scientific measurement and applied business. 

 

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