黑料吃瓜群网

Blood spot tests set to replace costly vials


By Belinda Willis, The Lead South Australia
Tuesday, 25 February, 2020


Blood spot tests set to replace costly vials

Adelaide-based is starting to market its new nutrition testing globally after proving the technique can replace costly and time-consuming vial blood testing with a simple finger prick.

The team is looking to break into the United States, European and Asian markets targeting five key customer groups: researchers, pathology labs, vitamin supplement companies, health insurers and corporations.

鈥淎fter preparatory work we are now at development stage, we鈥檙e almost ready to start training our global team to start promoting,鈥 said Trajan Nutrition Chief Executive Officer Marco Baccanti.

Baccanti said the technique would have a major impact on the nutrition industry by cutting testing costs, improving efficiencies and reducing the need for invasive blood testing for patients.

He said the blood spot testing had numerous potential income streams.

Vitamin supplement companies, for example, could provide customers with a testing kit where they could make a blood spot at home, dab it onto specially created paper, then send it to a lab for testing before they bought their products.

鈥淭his could offer people the opportunity to first see if their diet is imbalanced,鈥 Baccanti said.

鈥淧athology labs can also now start using this methodology with far less invasive collection of blood of patients and using faster analytics and more cost-effective techniques.鈥

The breakthrough includes the development of special contaminant-free paper to protect the specific blood compounds being tested. Solvents have also been developed to help transfer the dried blood samples from the paper to testing instruments.

University of Adelaide Professor of Functional Food Science Robert Gibson began work on the technology 10 years ago with Professor Maria Makrides.

Prof Makrides is one of Australia鈥檚 leading research experts into the nutritional needs of mothers and their babies 鈥 she leads the Healthy Mothers, Babies and Children Theme of the (SAHMRI) in Adelaide.

Both professors now also lead Trajan Nutrition, after making the breakthrough while overseeing large clinical nutrition trials of mothers and babies throughout the Asia鈥揚acific region.

Trajan Nutrition Chief Executive Officer Marco Baccanti and University of Adelaide Professor of Functional Food Science Robert Gibson.

Prof Gibson said the work was sparked by the mothers and babies trials initially relying on costly and invasive blood vial sampling.

鈥淢easuring blood samples for thousands of babies is costly in transporting traditional blood in vials, it needs to be frozen and then sent back via special dry ice post to the lab,鈥 Prof Gibson said.

鈥淎nd imagine a pre-term baby is very small, many only weigh 500 g and have very little blood, now we don鈥檛 have to take large blood volumes, we only take a drop.

鈥淚t鈥檚 more efficient, less painful and that means lower cost in training blood-taking nurses, now it can be done with this little automatic lancer that pricks the top of a finger.鈥

Melbourne-based Trajan Scientific and Medical established the joint venture with Prof Makrides and Prof Gibson in 2017 and since then the technique has been trialled and tested in the Australian market.

A recently signed memorandum of understanding with SAHMRI was expected to accelerate moves into the global market as the company leveraged expertise from the SAHMRI nutrition lab, recognised as one of the largest and best equipped in the Asia鈥揚acific region.

鈥淲e are one of the leading labs now at developing the new dry blood spot tests for a variety of nutrients and compounds,鈥 Prof Gibson said.

Baccanti was previously chief executive of the state鈥檚 Health Industries SA, where he was responsible for economic development in the life sciences sector.

Over his four-year tenure, Baccanti oversaw the establishment of 23 companies with more than 600 new direct jobs, clinical research investments from 10 overseas biotech companies and numerous university-industry collaborations.

He said this world-leading blood testing research needed to be matched with a company to commercialise 鈥 and creating Trajan Nutrition with Trajan Scientific and Medical meant it now had capacity for manufacturing and distribution.

Trajan was founded in 2011 and operates in Australia, Europe, the US and Asia with around 450 employees and customers in more than 100 countries.

Baccanti said the new blood spot testing kits and associated analysis would meet growing demand around the world for blood tests to move away from hospitals and dedicated blood test sites.

鈥淚n future we will stay at home and will receive modern technology posted to the home, we will use the test and post the paper back to the lab,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his type of need is global and it has started with an invention and solution at SAHMRI for nutrition testing.鈥

This work is licensed under a .

Originally published

Related Articles

A Day in the Life of a rehabilitation physician and burnout coach

Dr Jo Braid is a rehabilitation physician and coach dedicated to transforming burnout recovery...

A Day in the Life of an advanced exercise physiologist

Luke Snabaitis is the first exercise physiologist in Queensland Health history to...

In conversation with AHPA CEO Bronwyn Morris-Donovan

Among the many reforms 黑料吃瓜群网 Professions Australia's Bronwyn Morris-Donovan is...



Content from other channels on our network


  • All content Copyright 漏 2025 黑料吃瓜群网-Farrow Pty Ltd