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| TenAsys Real-time Platform Preserves Abbott Laboratories Proven Intellectual Property and Enables New Features in their PRISM® Blood Analyzer
A case in point is the design of the latest high-volume blood-screening analyzer from Abbott Diagnostics, a division of Abbott Laboratories of Abbott Park, IL. The ABBOTT PRISM® system is targeted at blood donation centers, such as those maintained by the Red Cross, where large volumes of blood samples are tested on a daily basis. The American Association of Blood Banks states that approximately eight million volunteers donate about 15 million units of whole blood every year; confidence in test results is of utmost importance. Before a blood donation enters the blood supply it must be tested for evidence of exposure to viruses that might cause disease, such as hepatitis, HIV, and other retroviruses. The typical screening process involves making several assays on each blood sample. The ABBOTT PRISM® consolidates and automates this testing into a single instrument, reducing the errors associated with manual handling of samples and improving the efficiency and throughput of the process. According to Abbott, their PRISM® systems screen donated blood in over 30 countries, processing more than 40 percent of the global blood supply. Evolving while maintaining compatibilityThe ABBOTT PRISM® system, so named because it uses an optical assaying technique, is the latest in a series of products that represent 20 years of development by Abbott Labs. While Abbott's newer instruments provide functionality similar to that of their predecessors, the underlying technologies used to build these systems continues to evolve over time. With each new design, Abbott has made a concerted effort to minimize changes to critical function areas, decreasing the time required to certify a new generation of the instrument and maintaining a high degree of confidence in the performance of the PRISM® product family.
Centrifuged blood samples are placed into racks of 28-tubes each. As a rack is loaded into the analyzer, barcodes are read from the tubes so that the system can track each sample. Up to ten racks of samples can be loaded into the analyzer at one time. Samples are drawn from each tube and dispensed into reaction trays using disposable pipettes manipulated via an XYZ positioning system. Pressure sensors measure sample aspiration and aid in the identification of clots and bubbles in the blood. Pressure monitoring is also used to detect problem events, such as a pipette hitting the bottom of a test tube. After completing dispensing from a rack of tubes, the rack may be removed from the analyzer and a new rack of tubes can be loaded to provide continuous processing for up to 24 hours. Samples that are initially reactive may be reloaded at any time and since the system will recognize that the sample was initially reactive it can automatically schedule the sample to be tested two more times to determine if the sample is confirmed reactive or nonreactive for any given test. Retesting only dispenses samples to those tests requiring retesting and not for tests that were initially non-reactive. As reaction trays move from station to station within the analyzer, reagents are added and the samples are heated to assist the reactions. When sample reactions have completed, a chemical "trigger" reagent is injected, causing each sample to luminesce. The "flash" of light given off by this chemiluminescence reaction is measured and quantified by the PRISM® blood analyzer, forming the basis of the test result. "There is a lot going on in the system at any given moment, and the need to maintain the integrity of each sample test is critical," said Richard Carver, a Principle Software Engineer for the Abbott Diagnostics Division."Our real-time software needs to manage hundreds of tasks reliably. There are tasks responsible for controlling each station of each channel, the barcode scanner, the sample manager XY-table, the sample manager pipetting assembly, sample scheduling, report generation, report printing, updating the results database, host processor communication, information display, resource/reagent monitoring, heater control, event logging, cycle coordination, and quite a few more," notes Carver. "When we developed the newest PRISM®, we needed to make sure that we didn't change the fundamental elements of the process."
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