Published April 26, 2023 | Version v2
Journal Article Open

Skin-Interfaced Wearable Sweat Sensors for Precision Medicine

Abstract

Wearable sensors hold great potential in empowering personalized health monitoring, predictive analytics, and timely intervention toward personalized healthcare. Advances in flexible electronics, materials science, and electrochemistry have spurred the development of wearable sweat sensors that enable the continuous and noninvasive screening of analytes indicative of health status. Existing major challenges in wearable sensors include: improving the sweat extraction and sweat sensing capabilities, improving the form factor of the wearable device for minimal discomfort and reliable measurements when worn, and understanding the clinical value of sweat analytes toward biomarker discovery. This review provides a comprehensive review of wearable sweat sensors and outlines state-of-the-art technologies and research that strive to bridge these gaps. The physiology of sweat, materials, biosensing mechanisms and advances, and approaches for sweat induction and sampling are introduced. Additionally, design considerations for the system-level development of wearable sweat sensing devices, spanning from strategies for prolonged sweat extraction to efficient powering of wearables, are discussed. Furthermore, the applications, data analytics, commercialization efforts, challenges, and prospects of wearable sweat sensors for precision medicine are discussed.

Additional Information

© 2023 American Chemical Society. This project was supported by the National Institutes of Health grants R01HL155815 and R21DK13266, National Science Foundation grant 2145802, Office of Naval Research grants N00014-21-1-2483 and N00014-21-1-2845, American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant RSG-21-181-01-CTPS, High Impact Pilot Research Award T31IP1666 from the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program, Sloan Research Fellowship, and Heritage Medical Research Institute. Author Contributions. J.M., J.T., C.X., and H.L. contributed equally to this work. CRediT: Jihong Min investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Jiaobing Tu investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Changhao Xu investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Heather Lukas investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Soyoung Shin investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Yiran Yang investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Samuel A Solomon investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Daniel Mukasa investigation, methodology, writing-original draft, writing-review & editing; Wei Gao conceptualization, funding acquisition, investigation, project administration, supervision, writing-review & editing. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
121414
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20230516-592783300.7
DOI
10.1021/acs.chemrev.2c00823
PMCID
PMC10406569

Funding

NIH
R01HL155815
NIH
R21DK13266
NSF
ECCS-2145802
Office of Naval Research (ONR)
N00014-21-1-2483
Office of Naval Research (ONR)
N00014-21-1-2845
American Cancer Society
RSG-21-181-01-CTPS
California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program
T31IP1666
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Heritage Medical Research Institute

Dates

Created
2023-05-18
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-05-18
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Heritage Medical Research Institute, Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS)