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PRESS RELEASEClick
to hear the Interview
given at Medica
2008 by
Dr John Attridge, Chelsea Technologies Group aids fight for homeland security with launch of On-Site Rapid Diagnostic Screening System Medica
2008, Dusseldorf,
The Chelsea Technologies Group (CTG) announces the development of an
‘on-site rapid diagnostics screening system’ designed to detect and
identify micro-organisms following a terrorist attack. Over
recent years CTG has developed a novel, low-cost, optical system for
reading low-density protein microarrays, work that was done in
partnership with Microtest Matrices Ltd. (MtM), a spin out from Imperial
College, London. With additional government sponsorship under the Home
Office’s CBRN programme, this advance has enabled the CTG, MtM and The
Health Inspection Agency (HPA) to develop a fully automated portable
microarray processing platform for on-site diagnosis, a step which had
hitherto been inhibited by the sophistication and expense of the optical
imaging techniques available for reading high density DNA arrays, which
until now has been the main driver for the development of this format. The portable
platform is designed to be rapidly deployed to any location in the event
of a suspected terrorist attack allowing investigators to take samples
from the immediate area of the incident – the walls, floor, people etc
and screen them quickly to determine whether potentially harmful
substances had been used in the attack.
John Attridge, Life Sciences Director, Chelsea Technologies Group, said: “The platform is designed to be rapidly deployed in the event of unexplained clusters of acute illness or fatality, to screen for the presence of a comprehensive panel of micro-organisms that might be associated with a deliberate terrorist attack, allowing these to be ruled out as a potential threat early in any investigation. The microarray format that the team has developed can readily be adapted for other applications, including the detection of potentially harmful chemicals in water supplies or for multianalyte detection in the medical diagnostics market.” CTG is keen to meet with organizations who may be
interested in collaborating on commercialization of the platform.
Feel free to contact Ellen
Keegan beforehand to set up a meeting. |