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. 2016 Jul 11;8(9):987–991. doi: 10.15252/emmm.201606541

Table 1.

Conceptual differences in medical procedures between conventional versus synthetic biology enabled diagnostics

Conventional diagnostics Synthetic biology enabled diagnostics
Diagnostic procedure Centralized clinical biochemistry laboratory, high resource requirements Ambulatory, close to patient, potentially in vivo, low resource, delocalized
Sample management Pre‐treatment, large volumes Raw, small volumes
Nature of biomarkers Parallelized, static, disconnected from patient pathophysiology Multiplexed, dynamic, in situ, close to patient pathophysiology
Data transmission Delayed, complex interfaces Real‐time, integrated signal processing, local/remote readout
Link to therapy Delayed, through physician evaluation Direct, in situ, through programmable decision algorithms: remote supervision
Data management Files, registries Embedded memory
Medical benefit Robustness, gold standard Patient comfort/care, personalized solutions, patient commitment
Development High cost and lengthy Short and low‐cost design to production