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Home NEWS Science News Health

Rice University students design congenital hypothyroidism test for newborns

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 8, 2023
in Health
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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HOUSTON – (May 8, 2023) – For newborns with congenital hypothyroidism, early diagnosis spells the difference between a normal, healthy life and lifelong disability.

team photo

Credit: (Photo by Hailee Adams/Rice University)

HOUSTON – (May 8, 2023) – For newborns with congenital hypothyroidism, early diagnosis spells the difference between a normal, healthy life and lifelong disability.

After learning about the heavy toll the disease takes on children born in parts of the world where testing is limited or absent, a team of Rice University students came together to develop a low-cost screening tool that can detect abnormally high thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels indicative of dysfunction.

The point-of-care, paper-based test developed by team Test TSH members Alex David, Elise Erickson, Vanshika Jhonsa, Margaret Li and Alison Maniace “has the potential to impact the lives of thousands of people every year, especially in low-resource areas, allowing for early treatment and preventing the permanent disabilities that can result from untreated congenital hypothyroidism,” according to Jasmine Nejad, the team’s faculty mentor and a global health lecturer in the Rice360 Institute for Global Health Technologies.

Thyroid hormone is crucial to the development of infants’ brain and nervous system and helps the heart, muscles and other organs function as they should. It also regulates how the body uses and stores energy and how it grows.

“At birth, babies with congenital hypothyroidism look normal, there’s no obvious sign of this disorder, so the main roadblock to treatment in low-resource settings is the lack of widespread screening programs,” Jhonsa said.

Taking inspiration from the design of the at-home COVID-19 test, the team came up with an easy-to-read test requiring only a small blood sample. They also created a 3D-printed casing for portability and to reduce the risk of infection.

Jhonsa further explained that because the thyroid gland is underactive or absent in babies born with congenital hypothyroidism, their system will try to compensate by overproducing thyroid-stimulating hormone.

“ Thyroxine (T4) is responsible for the development of all body systems, including brain development, muscle development and so on,” Maniace said. “A lack of T4 early in life will cause irreversible developmental delays if left untreated, which is why early-life diagnosis is so crucial.”

“In the U.S., newborns are by default screened for a lot of congenital diseases, hypothyroidism being one of them,” Li said. “In low-resource settings, there’s no infrastructure in place to conduct widespread testing for infants, making early diagnosis difficult both in terms of cost and access.”

“Testing infrastructure in the U.S. can take up a lot of space and resources, since you’ll typically have several technicians running these tests,” David said. “The difference between $1 or even just a few cents for a test versus the requirements of having this kind of infrastructure in place is just huge.”

Nejad said the device “could also lower the cost for screening in general as well as offer an adaptable platform that could provide accessible screening for other types of thyroid dysfunction that can occur later in life.”

“The beauty of this screening tool is that you can adapt it to test for different ages and even for other conditions,” Jhonsa said.

The students’ ability to draw from their diverse expertise in multiple fields of study earned them the Best Interdisciplinary Engineering Design Award at the George R. Brown School of Engineering’s annual Huff OEDK Engineering Design Showcase held last month at the Ion. The team also won first place in the global health track of the Johns Hopkins Healthcare Design Competition and second place in the Rice360 Global Health Technologies Design Competition.

“Vanshika and Elise are social policy analysis majors, I’m in health care sciences, Alex is a biosciences major and Alison designed her own major,” Li said. “We are a diverse group in terms of our background of study, and our project has an interdisciplinary aspect as well. We were working in the wet lab but also doing research on marketing and our target population.”

The team’s passion and drive compensated for its relative inexperience with the different aspects of the engineering design process.

“Since none of us are really engineers, being thrust into this new space was definitely challenging in the beginning,” Jhonsa said. “But it was a great learning experience and it was very rewarding at the end to have a product that works.”

Maniace added that it was “really inspiring to see that with a lot of passion for a project like this in global health we can actually have an impact.”

Dr. Kristina Tebo, who initially pitched the idea, said she “was happy the project was accepted and am thrilled at how the team has brought it to life.”

The team’s clinical mentors were Dr. Selorm Dei-Tutu, assistant professor of pediatrics in the division of diabetes and endocrinology at Baylor College of Medicine and a practitioner at Texas Children’s Hospital, and Tebo, assistant vice president of global health initiatives, assistant professor of pediatrics in the division of pediatric hospital medicine and co-director of the Pediatric Global Health Program at UTHealth Houston’s McGovern Medical School.

“Our mentors and professors and everyone we’ve learned from have been incredible,” David said. “The success we’ve had on this project really speaks to how much faculty cares about students and really puts effort into helping them see their projects through to the end.”

-30-

This release can be found online at news.rice.edu.

Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews.

Image downloads:

https://news-network.rice.edu/news/files/2023/04/IMG_Team_TestTSH_OEDK_1_LG.jpg
CAPTION: Team Test TSH members (from left) Margaret Li, Alex David, Alison Maniace, Elise Erickson and Vanshika Jhonsa pose beside their project stand at the 2023 Huff OEDK Engineering Design Showcase held April 13 at the Ion. (Photo courtesy of the Oshman Engineering Design Kitchen/Rice University)

https://news-network.rice.edu/news/files/2023/04/IMG_Team_TestTSH_Rice360_award_LG.jpg
CAPTION: Rice360 Institute for Global Health Technologies Director of Education Ashley Taylor (from left) and Executive Director Yvette Mirabal present Team TSH members Alison Maniace, Elise Erickson, Alex David, Margaret Li and Vanshika Jhonsa with an award for winning second prize in the 2023 Rice360 Global Health Technologies Design Competition. (Photo by Hailee Adams/Rice University)

https://news-network.rice.edu/news/files/2023/05/Team-TSH_global-health-technologies-design_1.jpg
CAPTION: The low-cost screening test developed by Rice University students identifies thyroid dysfunction in newborns and provides a clear, easy-to-interpret result. (Image courtesy of Team Test TSH/Rice University)

https://news-network.rice.edu/news/files/2023/05/Team-TSH_global-health-technologies-design_2.jpg
CAPTION: Early diagnosis is critical for newborns with congenital hypothyroidism, but affordable and easy-to-access testing options are unavailable in many low-resource areas around the globe. (Image courtesy of Team Test TSH/Rice University)

Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation’s top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. With 4,552 undergraduates and 3,998 graduate students, Rice’s undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is just under 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice is ranked No. 1 for lots of race/class interaction and No. 4 for quality of life by the Princeton Review. Rice is also rated as a best value among private universities by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance.



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