Clinical Research On-Demand: How the University of Washington’s Theberge Lab is Using Tasso to Study Unpredictable Events in Real Time - Case Study
The human impacts of wildfire smoke exposure are difficult to study in real time. When a fire does strike, people in range must take care to secure the safety of their family, pets, and belongings and cannot travel to a hospital or lab to take part in a clinical research study. Dr. Ashleigh Theberge, Assistant Professor at the University of Washington, was searching for a better way to study the health effects of these flash events.
Bringing the Study HomeTheberge knew that a flexible, decentralized approach to sampling would open up many new research possibilities. Remote blood collection was the key, but there were many requirements to balance in order for this methodology to succeed. The remote blood collection technology needed to be easy for subjects to use, quick to deploy, and produce a stable clinical-grade sample. Further, overall user experience needed to be positive in order to encourage completion of the multiple blood collection timepoints required.
“The nature of the studies we are performing—which involve multiple time points and samples collected soon after an exposure—means they cannot be achieved readily using clinic-based blood draws,” explains Theberge, “Tasso was the obvious choice for our remote blood collection method.” Remote blood collection has traditionally meant either mobile phlebotomy or a lancet-based finger stick, both of which have serious drawbacks. Mobile phlebotomy requires an inconvenient appointment and can be prohibitively expensive, while finger sticks yield low blood volumes and a painful user experience. Tasso’s technology was appealing to Theberge because it enables virtually painless blood collection from any geographical location with the simple push of a button, no user training or complex equipment needed. Kits are shipped directly to users and completed samples are shipped back, so participation is possible without ever leaving home. Using Tasso would produce the patient-centric sampling experience and high quality blood sample that the Theberge Lab needed.
The Theberge Lab designed a participant sampling kit, called homeRNA, containing the Tasso-SST and RNA stabilization reagents to use for their study. They have since been able to successfully collect blood samples from study participants exposed to wildfire smoke in multiple states.