# Rapid, equitable, lateral flow-based antibiotic susceptibility testing for urinary tract infections

> **NIH NIH R43** · LATDE DIAGNOSTICS CORP. · 2024 · $299,170

## Abstract

Summary
The goal of this Phase I project is to demonstrate feasibility of an equitable, rapid antibiotic susceptibility test
(AST) for urinary tract infections (UTIs) to be used in resource-limited and outpatient settings. UTIs impact over
13 million patients in the U.S. and 400 million worldwide each year. Women as well as individuals from low
socioeconomic backgrounds are disproportionately impacted by UTIs. Using currently available tools, healthcare
providers either delay prescription by up to 3 days while they wait for laboratory results to guide treatment or
prescribe antibiotics prior to obtaining laboratory results. Either approach delays customized therapy, often
prolonging pain, increasing the risk of serious complications and life-threatening urosepsis, and driving up
healthcare costs. To minimize the risk of resistance to uninformed treatment, providers can prescribe overly
aggressive treatment. However, this can lead to long-term side effects and exacerbates the antimicrobial
resistance crisis. Condensing the days-long diagnostic turnaround time has the potential to improve patient
outcomes, reduce healthcare costs, and promote antimicrobial stewardship. Although rapid AST technologies
exist, such instruments are rarely used for UTI diagnostics and are not widely available in outpatient or resource-
limited clinical settings. There is an unmet need for a rapid test that can guide antibiotic treatment in all settings
where UTIs are treated. Latde Diagnostics, a women-owned small business, is developing the Metabolic Amino
Acid Phenotyping (MAAP) test kit to provide susceptibility profiles for UTIs in <2 hours and make rapid ASTs
accessible to resource-limited and outpatient clinical settings in the U.S. and low and middle income countries
(LMICs). The MAAP assay couples metabolic labeling of bacterial cell wall with immunodetection and is based
on user needs identified through >220 customer interviews. MAAP’s bacterial cell wall building block analog
mimics a molecule conserved across UTI-causing bacteria, and is incorporated into the surface of actively-
growing bacteria in minutes, yielding a rapid phenotypic tool. Immunodetection allows seamless integration into
clinical workflows without the need for costly, specialized instrumentation through the use of lateral flow assay
(LFA). Latde has shown that the MAAP assay detects growth in leading UTI causative agent, Escherichia coli,
including clinical isolates from UTI samples. To validate the clinical utility and technical feasibility of the MAAP
assay, using a breadth of E. coli strains implicated in UTIs, Latde will 1) demonstrate feasibility of LFA readout
within clinically-relevant turnaround time and bacterial titer; and 2) eliminate repeated wash steps from the assay.
In future Phase II, Latde will assemble components generated in Phase I into a single prototype, which will then
be optimized and modified to meet Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) guidelines. Ult...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 11006225
- **Project number:** 1R43AI186702-01
- **Recipient organization:** LATDE DIAGNOSTICS CORP.
- **Principal Investigator:** Emily S Melzer
- **Activity code:** R43 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $299,170
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2024-07-08 → 2026-06-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/11006225

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 11006225, Rapid, equitable, lateral flow-based antibiotic susceptibility testing for urinary tract infections (1R43AI186702-01). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-26 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/11006225. Licensed CC0.

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