Credit: Nutromics
Vancomycin is
the antibiotic doctors reach for when almost nothing else will work. It's used
in hospitals for serious drug-resistant infections, or for when an infection is
spreading through the patient's bloodstream, but it's also notoriously tricky
to dose: too little and it won't knock out the infection, too much and the
patient risks kidney damage or even death. Up to 40% of patients receiving
vancomycin develop an acute kidney injury.
Right now, dosage levels are monitored by repeated
blood tests, an invasive and time-consuming process that can't always give
clinicians the data they need in time. Hoping to solve this issue, UNSW and
international researchers working alongside Australian diagnostics company
Nutromics developed a minimally
invasive patch that tracks the
antibiotic in patients every five minutes.
The team has published the results of a clinical trial in Nature
Biotechnology, and say its success demonstrates that the major scientific
and safety challenges have been solved.
"This is such an exciting breakthrough," says Scientia Professor Justin Gooding from the UNSW School of Chemistry, who helped develop the tool. "It means we can monitor people on the timescales needed so we can make sure they get the best treatment, the most effective treatment, and the safest treatment," he says.
EAB sensors deployed as wearable, minimally invasive
"patches." Credit: Nature Biotechnology (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41587-026-03010-w
A 'lab-on-a-patch'
The device uses synthetic DNA-based sensors to measure dosage levels,
building on lab research demonstrating their potential. The sensors, known as
"aptamers," bind to target molecules in the human body and sit on
microneedles in the patient's arm that sample fluid from beneath the skin.
Patients reported that this process was nearly painless, making the patches
much more comfortable than standard blood draws.
The aptamer technology can be tweaked to test for other drugs and
illnesses, and Nutromics is working on other diagnostic and monitoring patches.
"Sepsis is one of the leading causes of preventable death," says
Professor Gooding. "The problem with sepsis is its symptoms are very
similar to other infections, so how do we know for sure you've got sepsis? If
we could measure sepsis markers in the
body, then we could treat it very effectively and quickly using antibiotics. It
would save a lot of lives. But the concept can keep going on. If you think of
any drug, any small molecule, in principle, this technology could be used to
monitor for it."
Out of the lab and into the hospital
Researchers had long believed aptamer technology could be used as a
diagnostic tool, with previous studies on laboratory animals demonstrating
their potential. Working with Nutromics, however, gave researchers the
opportunity to help design a readily manufacturable device that could turn
their lab work into real-world impact.
"The reason I'm involved in this is this is really a once in a
lifetime opportunity," says Professor Gooding. "If this company gets
to market and this technology proves to be useful, it will change the way we do
health care."
Getting ideas out of academic research labs isn't always easy, though.
Professor Gooding says this is why industry partners are so crucial. "What
academics do is come up with the ideas and show that they have potential. If
they've got commercial potential, other people should take them through to
market," he says. "You need people who know how to translate an idea
into a product."
Nutromics CEO Peter Vranes also stresses the importance of partnerships
between academia and industry, noting that a research institution's true power
lies in discovery, not always in translating those discoveries.
"When trying to accomplish a world-first as we have in this study, you
need to combine exceptional discovery with translation," he says. "By
collaborating with leading research institutions like UNSW, we do exactly that:
successfully create real-world solutions that improve patient care."
Trials of the patch are underway in ICUs across Australia and Nutromics hopes to get U.S. regulatory approval by next year. The company is also working to adapt the technology to other conditions with the hope that real-time monitoring for cardiology, or even the ability to quickly triage patients in emergency departments, might one day become common.
Provided by University of New South Wales
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