Apr 24, 2024
11:00am - 11:15am
Room 434, Level 4, Summit
Surabhi Madhvapathy1,Jiao-Jing Wang1,Heling Wang2,Manish Patel3,Anthony Chang4,Xin Zheng1,Yonggang Huang1,Zheng Jenny Zhang1,Lorenzo Gallon1,John Rogers1
Northwestern University1,Tsinghua University2,University of Illinois at Chicago3,The University of Chicago4
Surabhi Madhvapathy1,Jiao-Jing Wang1,Heling Wang2,Manish Patel3,Anthony Chang4,Xin Zheng1,Yonggang Huang1,Zheng Jenny Zhang1,Lorenzo Gallon1,John Rogers1
Northwestern University1,Tsinghua University2,University of Illinois at Chicago3,The University of Chicago4
Early-stage organ transplant rejection can be difficult to detect. Percutaneous biopsies occur infrequently and are risky, and measuring biomarker levels in blood can lead to false-negative and -positive outcomes. We developed an implantable bioelectronic system capable of continuous, real-time, long-term monitoring of the local temperature and thermal conductivity of a kidney for detecting inflammatory processes associated with graft rejection, as demonstrated in rat models. The system detects ultradian rhythms, disruption of the circadian cycle, and/or a rise in kidney temperature. These provide warning signs of acute kidney transplant rejection that precede changes in blood serum creatinine/urea nitrogen by 2 to 3 weeks and approximately 3 days for cases of discontinued and absent administration of immunosuppressive therapy, respectively.