REAGENT COMPONENT DISPENSING CAPS FOR REAGENT CONTAINERS USED IN AUTOMATED CLINICAL ANALYZERS
20200047183 ยท 2020-02-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D39/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/523
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D51/2864
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D51/2892
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D51/2807
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/047
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D81/3211
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/044
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D51/2835
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D51/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D39/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Described is an automated reagent dispensing cap and methods of use in an automated clinical analyzer for introducing one or more reagent components housed in the reagent dispensing cap into a container enclosing another reagent component with which it is combined to achieve a reagent useful for diagnostic testing.
Claims
1. A device for storing reagents, comprising: a reagent dispensing cap 10, said reagent dispensing cap 10 comprising, a housing 12 with a central axially disposed lumen 11, said housing comprising a slider 9 configured to move laterally in the housing 12 in a direction that is perpendicular to the lumen 11 of the housing 12; wherein said slider 9 comprises one or more through-holes 5 configured to house a reagent component, each of said one or more through-holes 5 comprising an open end, a first position, and a second position, said through-hole aligned with the lumen 11 of the housing 12 in said second position, wherein said alignment is configured to release the reagent component housed in said through-hole 5 via said through-hole open end.
2. The device of claim 1 further comprising an attachment device 75 for joining the reagent dispensing cap 10 to the container 72.
3. The device of claim 2 wherein said attachment device 75 is selected from the group consisting of a snap-lock mechanism, friction-fit mechanism, threads, one or more tabs, receiving grooves, mating rings, and a Luer lock.
4. The device of claim 1 wherein said slider 9 comprises a slideable plug.
5. The device of claim 1 wherein said slider 9 shape is selected from the group consisting of disc-shaped, rectangular and cylindrical.
6. A method for preparing reagent components for mixing together in an automated clinical analyzer, the method comprising: storing one or more reagents in a reagent chamber within a container lid; forming a gas-tight seal between a first opening of the lumen and the reagent chamber by positioning a threaded cylindrical member within a lumen of the container lid such that the cylindrical member is operatively engaged with internal threads of the lumen; moving the cylindrical member along a longitudinal axis of the container lid; positioning a breakable seal at a second end of the lumen to seal the second end of the lumen such that the reagent chamber is bounded in the lumen between the cylindrical member and the breakable seal; joining or forming an attachment structure to the second end of the lumen wherein the attachment structure includes an engagement portion shaped for receiving a mating engagement portion of the container at an opening of the container; sealing the opening of the container by retaining the lumen and the breakable seal in a fixed position against the container at an opening of the container.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the attachment structure is selected from the group consisting of threads, snap-lock, mating rings, receiving grooves, a friction mechanism, luer lock, and one or more tabs.
8. The method of claim 6, comprising reversibly attaching the container lid to the container.
9. The method of claim 6, further comprising coupling the container lid to the container via the attachment structure.
10. The method of claim 9, further comprising: storing a first reagent in the reagent chamber of the container lid; and separately storing a second reagent in the container, wherein the first reagent and the second reagent are separated from each other by the breakable seal.
11. The method of claim 10, comprising: breaking the breakable seal to mix the second reagent with the first reagent by displacing the cylindrical member along the longitudinal axis of the container lid toward the breakable seal.
12. The method of claim 6, comprising piercing the breakable seal by a piercing probe extending from the cylindrical member toward the breakable seal in response to displacement of the cylindrical member along the longitudinal axis toward the breakable seal.
13. A method for storing reagents, comprising: providing a reagent dispensing cap 10, providing a housing 12 of the reagent dispensing cap with a central axially disposed lumen 11, said housing comprising a slider 9 configured to move laterally in the housing 12 in a direction that is perpendicular to the lumen 11 of the housing 12. said slider 9 comprising one or more through-holes 5 configured to house a reagent component, each of said one or more through-holes 5 comprising an open end, a first position, and a second position, said through-hole aligned with the lumen 11 of the housing 12 in said second position, wherein said alignment is configured to release the reagent component housed in said through-hole 5 via said through-hole open end.
14. The method of claim 13 further comprising providing an attachment device 75 for joining the reagent dispensing cap 10 to the container 72.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein said attachment device 75 is selected from the group consisting of a snap-lock mechanism, friction-fit mechanism, threads, one or more tabs, receiving grooves, mating rings, and a Luer lock.
16. The method of claim 13 wherein said slider 9 comprises a slideable plug.
17. The method of claim 13 wherein said slider 9 shape is selected from the group consisting of disc-shaped, rectangular and cylindrical.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DESCRIPTION
[0026] Described below is an automated reagent dispensing cap for separately storing and automatically dispensing at least one stored component to be combined with another stored component to make a reagent used in diagnostic assays, and methods for dispensing the stored component when used in an automated clinical analyzer, including hemostasis analyzers, immunoassay analyzers, chemistry analyzers, and the like. The stored reagent component(s) (i.e., one or more of the reagent components) is housed in the reagent dispensing cap freely, or in a primary pack such as a pouch, blister pack, pill, bag, using a membrane (e.g., a pierceable membrane) or in an ampoule containing one or more reagent components. The stored reagent components can be in a liquid form (e.g., a concentrate), a gel form or in the form of a dry component, e.g., powder, tablet, lyophilized, or granulated format.
[0027] The stored reagent component(s) in the reagent dispensing cap according to the invention are stored in a manner that prevents oxygen or moisture from influencing the chemical or the physical properties of the stored reagent component(s). In one embodiment, a seal cap is provided on one end of the cap to minimize contact between the reagent component(s) stored in the cap and the external environment surrounding the cap. Storage of the reagent component(s) in this manner minimizes loss of the reagent component(s) through evaporation.
[0028] The reagent dispensing cap according to the invention is disposed on a container which houses a second reagent component in the form of a liquid, gel or a dry component, e.g., powder, tablet, lyophilized, or granulated format. The contents of the reagent dispensing cap are dispensed into the container to which it is joined by an opening mechanism such as, but not limited to rotating or pushing the cap or a portion of the cap actuated by a plunger such as a ram, to break a seal, such as an elastomeric membrane, between the dispensing cap and container to release the stored component from the cap into the container to which it is joined. Various combinations and arrangements of components in the reagent dispensing cap and components in a container with which the reagent cap component will be mixed are contemplated by the invention.
[0029] These and other objects, along with advantages and features of the present invention described herein, will become apparent through references to the following description and the claims. Furthermore, it is to be understood that the features of the various components described herein are not mutually exclusive and can exist in various combinations and permutations.
[0030] In one aspect, the invention is directed to a device for storage of and automated dispensing of at least one reagent into a container to be combined with another component in the container to make a diagnostic reagent for use in an automated clinical analyzer, for example, Hemostasis Analyzer, ACLTOP (Instrumentation Laboratory Company, Bedford, Mass.).
[0031] Referring to
[0032] In one embodiment according to the invention, the chamber 62 stores a first reagent component that when mixed with a second reagent component(s) stored in a joined container 72 forms a reagent for a diagnostic assay. The housing 12 further includes internal threads 30 which extend along the interior wall of the housing, preferably but not limited to extending from the first end 20 to the second end 22 of the housing 10.
[0033] With continued reference to
[0034] Referring to
[0035] As shown in
[0036] As shown in
[0037] Referring to
[0038] Referring now to
[0039] Alternatively, referring to
[0040] In one embodiment of the invention illustrated in
[0041] In yet another embodiment of the reagent dispensing cap 10, referring to
[0042]
[0043] The reagent dispensing cap 10 is reversibly attachable to the container 72. For example, referring again to
[0044] A tamper-preventive tear-strip 76, for example, as illustrated in
[0045] The present invention provides the advantage of having multi-component reagent storage utilizing a section in the cap 10, e.g., the housing 12, to independently store one or more reagent components in liquid or dry form without exposing the reagent components to moisture or to oxygen that would otherwise alter their chemical or physical properties, or both, and without mixing the reagent components in the cap 10 with the reagent components in the joined container 72. Mixing the stored reagent components in the cap 10 with the reagent components in the joined container 72 when needed provides the additional benefit of reliable results because the reagent components were not pre-mixed and then stored for a longer period of time that would result in reagent deterioration.
[0046] Storage of one or more reagent components in a section of the cap 10, e.g., the housing 12, prior to its automated dispensing into the joined container 72 minimizes evaporation of the components in the housing 10 and in the joined container 72. Accidental human intervention is minimized because the release and the mixing of reagent components separately stored in the housing 12 and the container 72 is automated. The invention described herein minimizes errors in analytical results caused by prolonged storage and degradation of a prepared reagent, and the accidental loss of reagent components caused by human intervention. These features add to the cost-effectiveness of the reagents and the analysis of a patient sample.
EXEMPLIFICATIONS
[0047] An Exemplary Dual Chamber Reagent Mixing Container for Hemostasis Testing in an Automated Clinical Hemostasis Analyzer Instrument
[0048] A specific non-limiting example of the reagent dispensing cap according to the invention described above is a reagent dispensing cap for prothrombin time (PT) testing by an automated hemostasis analyzer instrument. The reagent for PT testing contains two components: a diluent and a concentrated PT reagent. The volume ratio between the diluent and the PT reagent is 19:1. Each PT test requires 100 l diluted PT reagent. A reagent dispensing cap useful for PT tests in an automated clinical analyzer would generally require between about 500 to about 1000 PT tests. A 1000 PT test reagent dispensing cap requires about 100 ml of diluted PT reagent, namely 95 ml diluent and 5 ml concentrated PT reagent. In the exemplary reagent cap disclosed herein, for example the reagent cap and container illustrated in
[0049] An Exemplary Dual Chamber Reagent Mixing Container for Analyte Testing in an Automated Clinical Analyzer
[0050] A second non-limiting example of the reagent dispensing cap according to the invention is a dispensing cap for a hemostasis quality control (QC) reagent, for example. A specifically prepared, lyophilized plasma sample with known analytical testing results would serve as a QC reagent. The QC reagent is stored in the container to which the reagent dispensing cap is joined. De-ionized water is stored in the chamber of the reagent dispensing cap. Prior to use, the deionized water is introduced from the chamber in the reagent dispensing cap into the container holding the lyophilized QC reagent.