Archives: 3/2005

softscan sideView SoftScan for Breast CASoftScan, a product of a Canadian firm Advanced Research Technologies Inc., is an optical imaging device designed to improve the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer. The company is trying to bring this interesting product to the American market.
The technology behind this product is based on the fact that malignancies have increased tissue perfusion and metabolism. The company explains:

In order to characterize breast tissue as malignant or benign, clinicians select regions of interest (ROIs) on images produced by the Softscan system. These ROIs are selected on the basis of the differences in intensity observed across the image and in comparison to the results obtained with other modalities. Using the multi-wavelength TD optical data acquired by the scan, a graph representing functional information (activity chart) is then generated and compares the perfusion (total hemoglobin concentration) and the metabolism (ratio deoxyhemoglobin/ total hemoglobin) of the ROI to the surrounding tissue. A significant increase in both the perfusion and the metabolism of an ROI, in comparison to the surrounding tissue, is indicative of a malignant tumor.
Such a discrimination of malignant tissue is based on the following elements:
– Low blood oxygen saturation due to a localized increase in metabolic activity generated by the cancer’s rapid growth; and
– Increased tissue perfusion due to angiogenesis. This formation of new small blood vessels allows the malignant tumor to survive and to metastasize (spread).

More at ART

breastchecker BreastCheckerAnother interesting product in the works for the diagnosis of breast cancer is the BreastChecker by Highland Innovation Centre Ltd. (please note that Highland Innovation is sponsoring an ad on these pages, but we think that BreastChecker is an interesting product irrespective of their generous support of our group blog).
The technology behind the product has to do with the fact that malignant CAs have proliferating blood vessels (the so-called angiogenesis) that have to supply a rapidly growing mass:

The chaotic mass of vessels surrounding the tumour supply oxygen and nutrients to the cancer and permit accelerated tumour growth. Angiogenesis is also a pathway for spread of tumour cells leading to secondary growths. Red blood cells strongly absorb light at about 550 nm [ the absorption bands of oxyhaemoglobin ]. In consequence the absorption of light passing through breast tissue surrounding the cancer is greater because of associated angiogenesis than that passing through tissues distant from it. Thus with a suitable light source applied to the underside of the female breast an area of reduced brightness on the superior aspect of the breast frequently indicates the presence of a cancer.

The BreastChecker prototype is equiped with optical (7 LEDs) and Doppler ultrasound features to discriminate between benign and malignant breast tumours. The company is thinking that this product will one day be in the hands of women themselves as “… an inexpensive, quick, and convenient way of determining whether or not they need to consult their doctor.”
More at HIC

redcannon 288 Fireball KeyPoint Crypto Mobile StorageA new storage device by RedCannon is designed with the health industry in mind, as it is secure enough to be used for medical record keeping (i.e. HIPPA Section 164.502c compliant). Everything USB explains:

The enterprise-grade flash drive’s data security is provided on a two-tier structure. The Sysadmin can define user policies and auditing of which documents and files are transferred to and from the drive, and client-side security exists with 256-bit AES encryption, secure file deletion, compression, and self-repair.
In the event that someone really is trying to crack into your files, the KeyPoint CMS has a built-in failsafe procedure that will delete all data on the drive after an excess number of invalid access attempts. With such robust data protection, the drive is actually compliant to HIPPA Section 164.502c for use in the medical industry.

The official press release is here.
RedCannon has more info about this product…
(hat tip: GadgetMadness)

ultracane[1] The Next Generation of CanesSound Foresight, a British medical device manufacturer, has released its new Ultracane, a cane for the 21st century that utilizes ultrasonic waves to determine the location of obstacles and relays the information to the user by vibrating buttons on the unit’s handle. The user interprets the vibrations to determine the direction and distance to the obstacle.
Perhaps technology will one day allow the unit to be built into one’s shoes or clothing and make the whole process more passive and easier on the user.
Sound Foresight has a short flash video demonstrating the device.
(Hat tip to Gizmodo.)

husemann sm Mobile Health Tool Kit by IBMA team at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in Switzerland has developed a new system for continuous patient monitoring. In the system, the mobile phone functions as a hub that collects and transmits information from monitoring devices to health care providers, and in turn is also used to remind patients to take medications and to perform other health-maintaining tasks.
The blood pressure cuff on the patient’s arm is Bluetooth-enabled. And, yes, the pill box pictured is no other than the Bang & Olufssen Medicom IDAS II.
More at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, Switzerland/SARIT website
(hat tip: MIT Technology Review)

armband health medium The HealthWear System for Weight ManagementIn an article at BusinessWeek titled ‘Wearable Computers You Can Slip Into’, we read about BodyMedia, a Pittsburgh company that has developed HealthWear, an armband that “collects data on the wearer’s physical state, such as the way the body releases heat,” and is designed to be a weight loss monitoring system.
The manufacturer explains:

The HealthWear System is a revolutionary weight loss monitoring system utilizing a wearable body monitor, proprietary algorithms, and a user friendly Internet application. The HealthWear Armband uses a collection of sensors to gather information. Data from the body is then downloaded to www.HealthWear.com where proprietary algorithms are used to calculate the wearer’s caloric expenditure, number of steps, and duration of physical activity. The Internet application can also track, summarize, and graph lifestyle and physiological data. The HealthWear System has received multiple industry awards including Gold and Silver Leadership Awards for best Web site by eHealthcare Strategy and Trends Magazine and was recently a recipient of a 2004 Medical Design Excellence Award sponsored by Medical Device & Diagnostic Industry Magazine.

More at HealthWear

photo unit on table NxStage System One Portable DialysisA press release by the University of Indiana School of Medicine informs that a “suitcase-sized machine” is making life easier for patients on hemo dialysis for renal failure.
NxStage Medical, Inc., a company that designed the product explains:

The NxStage System One is no traditional piece of dialysis or CRRT equipment. Patient needs will differ, and therapy options should not be limited. The system is FDA cleared to deliver multiple therapy options, and delivers these therapies in short intermittent schedules, long continuous schedules, or anything in between. The System One is easily configured for chronic care or critical/acute care settings, and can be routinely used in treatment of chronic renal failure, acute renal failure, and fluid overload associated with heart failure. With this flexibility, NxStage provides a simple, natural platform to support your entire therapy program.

More at NxStage Medical

ct023211 170 GEs LightSpeed VCT SystemGE Healthcare has announced yesterday the first cardiology-specific installation of its next-generation volume computed tomography (CT) scanner, the LightSpeed VCT. GE Healthcare describes the system:

The innovative hallmark of this non-invasive imaging system is the new V-Res™ detector with its ability to deliver wide anatomical coverage and high resolution, simultaneously.
This unprecedented coverage speed allows clinicians to capture whole organs in a second, the heart in 5 beats, or go head to toe in under 10 seconds — faster than any other CT scanner on the market today.
With breakthroughs in technology, comes the opportunity for new and dynamically enhanced procedures, such as:
5-Beat Cardiac™ – a comprehensive view of the heart and coronary arteries with submillimeter resolution in 5 seconds. The coverage possible helps reduce beat-to-beat variability resulting in more robust, repeatable procedures, greater vessel visualization and shorter breath holds for sick patients.
Triple RuleOut™ – the ability to help clinicians rule out (or in) the three most life-threatening critical conditions in chest pain in one single scan – aortic dissection, pulmonary embolism and coronary artery disease.
Stroke WorkUp – the ability to dynamically acquire both anatomy and perfusion/blood flow to the brain in a cine scan.

More at product’s page at GE Healthcare

The San Jose Mercury News reports about an interesting project that is grounded in the new evolving field of systems biology:

A team of Bay Area scientists has received a five-year, $15 million grant to study human breast cancer cells. They’ll look at how protein networks, the cells’ internal messengers, transmit vital information — and how these pathways go awry, leading to cancer.
To analyze this communication, the researchers at SRI International in Menlo Park and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory will apply concepts from math, physics and computer science that typically have been reserved for tasks like debugging computer chips.
“It’s my belief that signaling processes in cells are logical,” said Keith Laderoute, director of SRI’s cancer biology program. “It’s just that we don’t know what the logic is.”
In a microchip, information flow is controlled by millions of transistors: tiny integrated circuit components that switch electrical signals on and off.
In similar fashion, human cells communicate information from the surrounding environment into the nucleus through complex webs of interacting molecules. How well these signals get processed determines, for instance, whether a cell divides.
Messed-up signals could make cells divide uncontrollably and become a tumor. And “debugging” these molecular pathways could help scientists understand better how cancer develops and how it might respond to different treatments.
“The goal of this is to reduce the biology into a set of circuits,” said Paul Spellman, a Lawrence Berkeley computational biologist involved in the new work.
To do this, he and other researchers at SRI, Lawrence Berkeley and the University of California-San Francisco are building a model of protein signaling networks using 50 human cell lines — cancer cells that have been isolated from patients and cultured in labs for research purposes.
Years of experiments by hundreds of research groups have revealed a dauntingly complex picture of the genes that get switched on and off in response to various conditions. Spellman and his team are translating this data into simple rules that SRI computer scientists can program into the model. The rules look something like this: If Protein A interacts with Molecule B, Gene C gets activated.
“The current system incorporates about a thousand different interacting proteins and signaling molecules,” Laderoute said, but this is “still quite small” compared to what’s really going on inside human cells.
Called Pathway Logic, the system will help biologists make predictions about what will happen to cancer cells if a specific component of a signaling pathway gets blocked — as it would with certain drug treatments, for instance.
Still in its early stages, the model has already been used to identify redundant pathways that allow tumor cells to keep dividing after a primary growth pathway is thwarted, said Pat Lincoln, director of SRI’s computer science lab. Such redundancies could explain why certain human breast tumors don’t respond to popular therapies like Genentech’s Herceptin.

Very interesting article to read. If you would like to learn more about systems biology go to Wired
SRI International’s press release
Pathway Logic info/demo is here