Researchers have developed a new blood-clotting test that uses only a single drop of blood and a smartphone vibration motor and camera. The system includes a plastic attachment that holds a tiny cup beneath the phone’s camera.

Developed by researchers at the University of Washington, the test requires a drop of blood to the cup, which contains a small copper particle and a chemical that starts the blood-clotting process. Then the phone’s vibration motor shakes the cup while the camera monitors the movement of the particle, which slows down and then stops moving as the clot forms. The researchers showed that this method falls within the accuracy range of the standard instruments of the field.

The team published the findings recently in in Nature Communications.

“Back in the day, doctors used to manually rock tubes of blood back and forth to monitor how long it took a clot to form. This, however, requires a lot of blood, making it infeasible to use in home settings,” says senior author Shyam Gollakota, UW professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering. “The creative leap we make here is that we’re showing that by using the vibration motor on a smartphone, our algorithms can do the same thing, except with a single drop of blood. And we get accuracy similar to the best commercially available techniques.”

Doctors can rank blood-clotting ability using two numbers:

  • The time it takes for the clot to form, what’s known as the prothrombin time (PT).
  • A ratio calculated from the PT that allows doctors to more easily compare results between different tests or laboratories, called the international normalized ratio (INR).

“Most people taking this medication are taking it for life. But this is not a set-and-forget type of thing—in the U.S., most people are only in what we call the ‘desirable range’ of PT/INR levels about 64% of the time,” says co-author Kelly Michaelson, MD, PhD, assistant professor of anesthesiology and pain medicine in the UW School of Medicine. “This number is even lower—only about 40% of the time—in countries such as India or Uganda where there is less frequent testing. How can we make this better? We need to make it easier for people to test more frequently and take ownership of their health care.”

Patients who can monitor their PT/INR levels from home would only need to go to see a clinician if the test suggested they were outside of that desirable range, says Michaelsen.

Researchers were looking to develop an inexpensive device that could work similarly to how at-home blood sugar monitors work for people with diabetes: A person can prick their finger and test a drop of blood.

“We started by vibrating a single drop of blood and trying to monitor waves on the surface,” says lead author Justin Chan, a UW doctoral student in the Allen School. “But that was really challenging with such a small amount of blood.”

The team added a small copper particle because its motion was so much more reliable to track.

“As the blood clots, it forms a network that tightens. And in that process, the particle goes from happily bouncing around to no longer moving,” says Michaelsen.

To calculate PT and INR, the phone collects two time stamps: first when the user inserts the blood and second when the particle stops moving.

“For the first time stamp, we’re looking for when the user inserts a capillary tube containing the sample in the frame,” says Chan. “For the end of the measurement, we look directly at the interior of the cup so that the only movement within those frames is the copper particle. The particle stops moving abruptly because blood clots very quickly, and you can observe that difference between frames. From there we can calculate the PT, and this can be mapped to INR.”

This device is still in a proof-of-concept stage. The researchers have publicly released the code and are exploring commercialization opportunities as well as further testing.

“Almost every smartphone from the past decade has a vibration motor and a camera. This means that almost everyone who has a phone can use this. All you need is a simple plastic attachment, no additional electronics of any kind,” Gollakota says. “This is the best of all worlds — it’s basically the holy grail of PT/INR testing. It makes it frugal and accessible to millions of people, even where resources are very limited.”

Additional co-authors on this paper are Joanne Estergreen, clinical laboratory supervisor in the UW School of Medicine’s laboratory medicine and pathology department, and Daniel Sabath, MD, PhD, professor of laboratory medicine and pathology in the UW School of Medicine. This research was funded by the Moore foundation fellowship.

Featured image: Researchers at the University of Washington have developed a new blood-clotting test that uses only a single drop of blood and a smartphone vibration motor and camera. The system includes a plastic attachment that holds a tiny cup of blood beneath the phone’s camera (shown here). Photo: Mark Stone/University of Washington