Automated, Point-of-Care mobile flow cytometry: Bringing the laboratory to the sample

Publication date

2024-04-30

Authors

Jukema, B. N.
Pelgrim, T. C.
Spoelder, M.
Bongers, C. C.W.G.
Hopman, M. T.E.
Smit, K.ORCID 0000-0002-0839-4185
Rijk, Merijn HORCID 0000-0003-4190-2126
Venekamp, Roderick PORCID 0000-0002-1446-9614ISNI 0000000393819260
Vrisekoop, Nienke
Koenderman, LORCID 0000-0002-5636-6453ISNI 0000000398375208

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

Background: Innate effector cells are very responsive to infectious and inflammatory cues found in damaged and inflamed tissues. Their activation is a potential target to assess the state of the immune system. Unfortunately, these cells are very susceptible for ex-vivo activation, hampering accurate interpretation of flow cytometry data. Whether a brief window exists before ex-vivo activation starts to occur is currently unknown. Aims: 1) This study extensively investigated ex-vivo activation of innate effector cells over time. 2) We tested the feasibility of applying a mobile, automated, flow cytometry laboratory for out-of-hospital Point-of-Care analyses to minimize ex-vivo activation bias. Methods: 1) Ex-vivo neutrophil, eosinophil and monocyte activation in a blood collection tube over time and the reactivity to a formyl-peptide was investigated in a healthy cohort. 2) To facilitate fast, out-of-hospital analysis, application of the mobile flow cytometry was tested by placing an automated flow cytometer into a van. The stability of the setup was assessed by repetitively measuring laser alignment and fluorescence verification beads. Findings: 1) Immediately after venipuncture activation marker expression on neutrophils, eosinophils and monocyte subsets started to change in a time-dependent manner. 2) The mobile flow cytometry laboratory travelled over 3000 km, performing measurements at 19 locations with a median single-person-set-up time of 14 min. The laser alignment and fluorescence were stable during all experiments. Conclusions: Accurate flow data of innate immune cells are only obtained when ex-vivo activation is kept to minimum. The use of a mobile, fast, automated, flow cytometry laboratory for out-of-hospital Point-of-Care analyses provides new investigational and diagnostic possibilities outside major hospital flow cytometry laboratories.

Keywords

Eosinophil, First line care, Innate immune activation, Mobile flow cytometry, Monocyte, Monocyte subsets, Near patient, Neutrophil, Point-of-Care, Systemic inflammation, General, Journal Article

Citation

Jukema, B N, Pelgrim, T C, Spoelder, M, Bongers, C C W G, Hopman, M T E, Smit, K, Rijk, M H, Venekamp, R P, Vrisekoop, N & Koenderman, L 2024, 'Automated, Point-of-Care mobile flow cytometry : Bringing the laboratory to the sample', Heliyon, vol. 10, no. 8, e28883, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e28883