METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR COLLECTING CELLS AND BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES FOR SCREENING
20210137506 · 2021-05-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B2010/0003
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2010/0208
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B10/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A device for self-collection of a cervical sample includes an enclosure, a sample-collecting head, and a slider and a knob on the enclosure. The enclosure can be gripped by a user in one hand and inserted into the user's vaginal canal. The enclosure has an opening at one end, and a sample-collecting head can be advanced and retracted through the opening. The slider is on a side of the enclosure and is coupled to advance and retract the sample-collecting head, typically using a thumb. The knob is rotated by the user to rotate the sample-collecting head while the enclosure remains in the user's vaginal canal.
Claims
1. A device for self-collection of a biological sample, said device comprising: an enclosure configured to be gripped in a hand of a user and inserted into the user's vaginal canal, said enclosure having an opening at a distal end thereof; a sample-collecting head configured to be advanced and retracted through the opening; a translational actuator on a side of the enclosure, said translational actuator being coupled to the sample-collecting head and being configured to be engaged by the one or another of user's hands to advance the sample-collecting head through the opening to a location proximate the user's cervical os and to retract the sample-collecting head through the opening into an interior of the enclosure; and a rotational actuator configured to be rotated by one or other of the user's hand to rotate the sample-collecting head while the enclosure is in the user's vaginal canal and is being held by one or other of the user's hands.
2. A device as in claim 1, wherein a distal region of the enclosure tapers a distal tip.
3. A device as in claim 2, wherein the distal region of the enclosure conforms to a vaginal anatomy.
4. A device as in claim 3, wherein the opening in the enclosure is at the distal tip.
5. A device as in claim 1, wherein the sample-collecting head comprises one or more of a brush, a sponge, a protrusions, bristles, flocculated bristles, and combinations thereof.
6. A device as in claim 1, wherein the sample-collecting head comprises a foldable backing having a forwardly facing sample-collecting surface, wherein the sample-collecting head is folded when in the interior of the enclosure and unfolds as it is advanced through the opening.
7. A device as in claim 6, wherein the sample-collecting head is configured to refold when retracted back into in the interior of the enclosure.
8. A device as in claim 1, further comprising a slidable carriage within the enclosure, wherein the slidable carriage is coupled to both the sample-collecting head and the translational actuator so that advancing and retracting the translational actuator advances and retracts the sample-collecting head.
9. A device as in claim 8, wherein the translational actuator comprises a slider having a thumb button and a coupling arm which attaches the thumb button to the slidable carriage, wherein the coupling arm is slidably received in an axial slot in a wall of the enclosure.
10. A device as in claim 9, wherein the axial slot has ratchets along an axial edge thereof and wherein the coupling arm is biased to engage the ratchets to immobilize the slider and the slidable carriage when the thumb button is released and to disengage the ratchets when the thumb button is depressed to advance and retract the slider and the slidable carriage.
11. A device as in claim 1, wherein the rotational actuator is coupled to the sample-collecting head by a rotatable barrel and a shaft, wherein the shaft is keyed to the rotatable barrel to allow axial extension and retraction of the sample-collecting head relative to the barrel while the rotatable barrel is rotated by the rotational actuator.
12. A device as in claim 1, wherein the rotational actuator is coupled to the rotatable barrel by a gear train which rotates the barrel from four to 12 times for each rotation of the rotational actuator.
13. A device as in claim 1, further comprising an insertion stop disposed on an exterior of the enclosure at a location spaced proximally of the distal end.
14. A device as in claim 1, wherein the rotational actuator comprises a knob disposed at a proximal end of the enclosure.
15. A system for collecting and transporting a cervical sample, said system comprising: a device for self-collection of a cervical sample as in any one of claim 1; a collection receptacle having an aperture configured receive the distal end of the enclosure to allow the sample-collecting head to be advanced through the opening of the enclosure and into an interior volume of the collection receptacle; and a cover configured to be sealed over the aperture of the collection receptacle after the sample-collecting head has been detached from the device and released into the interior of the interior volume of the collection receptacle.
16. A system as in claim 15, wherein the aperture is configured to seal about an exterior of the enclosure of the device for self-collection.
17. A system as in claim 16, wherein the collection receptacles further comprising cutters on the receptacle configured to detach the sample-collecting head from the device for self-collection of a cervical sample while the aperture remains sealed about the exterior of the enclosure.
18. A method for self-collection of a cervical sample by a user, said method comprising: gripping an enclosure; inserting a distal end of the enclosure into the user's vaginal canal; advancing a sample-collecting head from an interior of the enclosure through the opening to engage tissue proximate the user's cervical os; rotating the sample-collecting head while the enclosure remains in the user's vaginal canal to collect sample from the tissue; retracting the sample-collecting head back into the interior of the receptacle; withdrawing the distal end of the enclosure from the user's vaginal canal after the sample-collecting head has been retracted back into the interior of the enclosure; wherein all steps are performed by the user.
19. A method as in claim 18, wherein the user grips the enclosure in one hand and inserts the distal end of the enclosure into the vaginal canal using the one hand.
20. A method as in claim 19, wherein the user uses the one hand or another hand to advance a translational actuator on an exterior of the enclosure to advance the sample-collecting head from an interior of the enclosure through the opening to engage tissue proximate the user's cervical os.
21.-32. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0032] The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0048] Referring now to
[0049] The enclosure 12 typically includes a flange or other insertion stop 22 on its exterior surface. The flange 22 will be located at a pre-selected distance proximal of the distal end 14 of the enclosure, where the distance is selected to provide a controlled insertion length for the distal region 18, typically from 1 cm to 10 cm, usually from 2 cm to 8 cm.
[0050] The sample collector 10 further includes an axial actuator, typically a slider 24, which includes a thumb button 26 which slides in an axial slot 28. A rotational actuator, such as rotatable knob 30, is typically disposed at the proximal end of the enclosure 12. As best seen in
[0051] Referring now to
[0052] A carriage 42 having a base 44 at a distal end thereof is attached to the thumb button 26 by a lever arm 50. The lever arm is resiliently or pivotally attached to the base 44 so that the button 26 may be depressed by pressing downwardly, typically by a user's thumb, so that the button will spring back when the downward pressure is removed. A cam element 52 is carried on a lower surface of the button 26, and a pair of channel guides 48 are provided which allow the carriage 42 to axially translate within the enclosure, as will be described in more detail below. Base 44 has a coupling slot 46 formed in its lower edge.
[0053] The coupling arm 36 which carries the sample-collecting head 34 is attached at its proximal end to a shaft 64 having a square or other non-circular periphery. The shaft 64, in turn, is reciprocatably mounted in a rotating barrel 66 whose purpose will be described shortly. A coupling disk 60 is secured out or near the junction between the proximal end of the coupling arm 36 and the distal end of the shaft 64. As best seen in
[0054] Referring now in particular to
[0055] The channel guides 48 of the carriage 42 are received on rails 58 formed on the inner surfaces of the half shells 40 of the enclosure 12. The cam element 52 on the bottom of the thumb button 26 will engage the ratchets 54 when the thumb button is in its unbiased configuration, i.e. is not depressed by the thumb, as shown in
[0056] Referring now to
[0057] The sample-collecting head 100 will be in its deployed or unfolded configuration, as shown in
[0058] Referring now to
[0059] As described thus far, the foldable backings and the finger protrusions may be formed separately, typically from different materials. For example, the foldable backings 102 and 122 may be formed from pliable polymers which are structurally sufficient to withstand folding, unfolding, and passage through the opening 32 in the enclosure 12. The protrusions or fingers in contrast, may be formed from sponge-like or other softer materials which are configured to engage tissue and collect cells and other biological sample from the tissues in or surrounding the cervical os.
[0060] In contrast, as shown in
[0061] A further, alternative sample-collecting head 160 may comprise a plurality of protrusions/fingers 162 which are collected at their proximal ends and which diverge radially outwardly in a distal direction. A stem 146 may be attached to the region where the protrusions/fingers 162 are connected at their respective bases. The protrusions/fingers 162 may simply collapse or fold together when radially constrained, as shown in
[0062] In yet another embodiment, a sample-collecting head 170 as illustrated in
[0063] As a final example, a sample-collecting head 180 may comprise a sponge structure 182 having a conical cell-collection surface 184 at a distal end and a stem 186 attached at a proximal end, as shown in
[0064] Referring now to
[0065] Once insertion as shown in
[0066] After the sample-collecting head 34 has been locked in place, the user will then rotate knob 30 in order to cause the sample-collecting head 34 to rotate against the tissue surrounding the os CO, as shown by the arrow in
[0067] After the user rotates the sample-collecting head a sufficient number of times, typically rotating the knob 30 from 1 to 10 times, which in turn causes a rotation of the sample-collecting head in the range from 5 rotations to 10 rotations (depending on the gear ratio, if any), the sample-collecting head may be axially retracted back within the enclosure 12 through the distal opening 32, as shown in
[0068] Referring now to
[0069] As shown in
[0070] The sample-collecting head 34 is then detached from the sample collector 10. Advantageously, detachment may be effected using a pair of blades 194 which may be externally closed by the user to sever the coupling arm or stem 36. Shown in
[0071] In an alternative embodiment, a sample collector 300 is provided with wheel-type axial and rotational actuators in place of the actuators described with reference to
[0072] In place of the axial slider described previously, however, the sample collector 300 uses a toothed axial drive wheel 324 to engage and drive a flexible ratcheted section 312 of the stem 306. An upper portion of the toothed axial drive wheel 324 extends through a slot or other aperture in the enclosure so that a user can manually turn the drive wheel. By turning the toothed axial drive wheel 324 a counter-clockwise direction (typically using a thumb), the stem 306 and sample-collecting head 310 can be fully retracted, as shown in
[0073] The sample-collecting head 310 can be rotated by manually turning a toothed rotational drive wheel 330 about a longitudinal axis 332. The toothed rotational drive wheel 330 engages an axially splined region 314 of the stem 306. The rotational drive wheel 330 extends through an opening in the enclosure 304 in a manner similar to the toothed axial drive wheel 324. Typically, the axially splined region 314 will be rotationally coupled to the ratcheted region 312 of the stem so that the axially splined region can be rotated without rotating the ratcheted region. Alternatively, the ratcheted region could be ribbed (rather that having axially aligned ratchets) to accommodate rotation just as the splines accommodate axial advancement and retraction of the stem 306. An extension region 316 of the stem 306 extends through an opening 308 in the enclosure and carries the sample-collecting head in a manner similar to the previous embodiments.
[0074] In still other embodiments, the spool 320 could be configured to be rotated directly by the user. By doing so, the axial drive wheel 324 could be eliminated and an alternate drive wheel, knob, lever, or the like (not illustrated) coupled to the spool 320 for axial advancement and retraction of the stem 306.
[0075] In still other embodiments, a camera, an optical fiber, and/or other image sensor or system could be incorporated into the device to enable real time and/or archival visual or other imaging of the cervix and vaginal vault. The image sensor could provide optical imaging, near infrared imaging, contour imaging, ultrasound imaging, OCT imaging, or any other form of imaging. Such imaging could provide data which could be used either for (i) direct visualization to detect gross lesions/pathology or (ii) to help guide the collecting device to the cervical os (based on an automated feedback tracking software which could align the collecting device to the cervical os). The image sensor could be (i) integrated into the center of the flexible stem which encompasses the collecting device or (ii) on the tip of the enclose which gets inserted into the vaginal canal. Depending on the type of image sensor, a LED or other light source could also be provided. The imaging sensor could be coupled via a wired or wireless link back to a receiver which could be housed in the enclosure of the device or elsewhere, e.g. either through wires/optical cables or via WIFI/Bluetooth. The information from the receiver could be viewed, stored, analyzed on a local device, such as a computer, mobile phone, pad or other smart device, and/or could be sent to a centralized archive (e.g. on the cloud) for analysis and storage. With a local device, this information could also be used so the user can manually adjust the device in her vagina for correct alignment.
[0076] While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.