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Funded
Projects
UCLA Collaborative
Oral Fluid Diagnostic Research Center
Grant Number: 1U01DE015018-01
PI Name: David T. Wong
PI E-mail: dtww@ucla.edu
PI Title: Professor and Director
Institution: University of California Los Angeles
10920 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1200
Los Angeles CA 90024
Department: Diagnostic and Surgical Sciences
Project Start: 30-Sep-2002
Project End: 30-Jun-2006
Abstract
The ability to monitor health status, disease onset
and progression, and treatment outcome monitoring through non-invasive
means is a most desirable goal in the health care promotion and delivery.
There are three prerequisites to materialize this goal: specific biomarkers
associated with a health or disease state; a non-invasive approach to
detect and monitor the biomarkers; and the technologies to detect the
biomarkers. The UCLA Collaborative Oral Fluid Diagnostic Research Center
(UCLA-COFDRC) presents a proposal to achieve these goals through the
use of oral fluids as the diagnostic medium to monitor the health and/or
disease status of individuals. The critical link to materialize these
goals is the presence of technological expertise in micro-electro- mechanical
systems (MEMS) and nano-electro-mechanical systems (NEMS) at the UCLA
School of Engineering. Existing technologies, for which proof of principle
exists, are in place to tailor and to optimize for oral fluid-based
applications. This proposal will achieve its stated objectives by three
Specific Aims. Aim 1 is to optimize MEMS and NEMS technologies to detect
multiple analytes in oral fluids. Technological expertise will be working
with experts in oral fluid research for clinical optimizations. Aim
2 is to translate the optimized technologies to two areas of oral health
research relevant to the research missions of NIDCR: oral cancer and
oral pathogen detection. Aim 3 is the Technology Dissemination Phase
whereby the optimized technologies will be streamlined for commercialization
to be used in clinical and bedside settings. Corporate sponsors will
participate in the development and commercialization of our technologies.
A Resource and Informatics Core is in place whereby research outcomes
from this Center can be disseminated to the research community as well
as creating awareness of our resources and technological developments
to the public. We are excited to present our collaborative consortium.
This is an ideal opportunity to bridge state of the art biosensor technologies
to oral fluid for diagnostic applications. Oral fluid being the mirror
of body is a perfect medium to be explored for health and disease monitoring.
The translational applications and opportunities are enormous. Significant
institutional commitments and corporate sponsorships are in place, fulfilling
the research, training, as well as technology transfer missions of NIDCR.
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