2017

Project types:   GH indicates Global Health  | MT indicates MedTech

 

Graduate

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Taryn Amatruda, Tessa Bronez, Katie Kan, Arvind Mohan, Thai Nguyen, Rachel Yung
    Advisors: Youseph Yazdi, PhD. Soumyadipta Acharya, MD, PhD., Aditya Polsani, BDS, MS, Yong Cho, PhD., Daniel Flo, Nathan Grenz, Jonathan Zimmer, Julia Chen, PhD., Shu Peng, MD, Ronald Berger, MD, PhD., Victor Yu, MSE

    ABSTRACT

    Currently only a small number of patients with bradycardia (abnormally slow heart rate) in China receive optimal treatment for their disease, as there are about 31 pacemaker implants per million population in China, compared to 272 in Japan and 767 in the United States. Pacemakers are used to treat patients with bradycardia and are a safe, effective, life-improving and often life-saving treatment. Thus, in collaboration with Medtronic, we set out to identify the root causes behind the low pacemaker adoption rate in China and develop a solution to begin to address this significant problem. Following our first ethnographic research trip to China in August 2016, we determined that patients diagnosed with bradycardia and recommended to receive a pacemaker are often hesitant to receive this life-improving treatment. Our findings showed that about one third of patients refuse to receive a pacemaker because they do not truly understand their diagnosis and the rationale behind needing a pacemaker. Variable patient education, the lack of reliable medical sources available for patients, and the very limited time (<5 minutes) physicians spend with their patients are all influential on the lack of patient understanding regarding pacemakers. In order to test our hypotheses about patient understanding and receive feedback on our potential solutions to address this unmet need, we interviewed more Chinese patients in January of 2017. With post-implantation pacemaker patient feedback, we determined the most impactful way to move forward. Thus, we have developed a patient-centered wearable smartwatch, called BradyBand, to improve pacemaker understanding in bradycardia patients. This consumer device empowers patients to track their health and understand how their symptoms and low quality of life are correlated with their heart condition. Although diagnostic devices for arrhythmias exist, they merely provide data to the physician about the patient’s disease state. BradyBand is the first device designed for post-diagnosis patients, providing them with clear data about their own cardiac health. It consists of a plethysmographic sensor to constantly track the patient’s heart rate, a button to track symptoms, and a clear summary of instances when the patient’s low heart rate is correlated with their symptoms. The device is designed with the end user in mind and therefore has a low-price point and intuitive user-interface. Through empowering patients to be more cognizant of their cardiac health, we believe BradyBand will help bradycardia patients receive the appropriate pacing treatment to improve their lives.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Rachel An, Andrew Jann, Matthew Lerner, Polly Ma, Mohit Singhala
    Advisors: Soumyadipta Acharya, MD, PhD; Azadeh Farzin, MD; Christopher Golden, MD; Alain Labrique, PhD; Youseph Yazdi, PhD

    ABSTRACT

    Approximately 2.7 million newborns die each year, with 75% of these deaths occurring during the first week of life. One approach to tackle this problem has been to send community health workers, or CHWs, to the home to assess the neonate during this high risk period. The CHW assesses the neonate based on the WHO guidelines: difficulty feeding, convulsions, chest indrawing, movement only when stimulated, respiratory rate > 60bpm, and temperature > 37.5°C or < 35.5°C. Identification of even one of these danger signs is indicative of severe neonatal illness and result in referral of the neonate to a facility. However, the limited number of community health workers and infrequency of visits create a bottleneck, and the timing of proper assessment aligning with the onset of symptoms is happenstance. During the times in the first week when the CHW is not present, sick neonates may be identified too late to impact survival. By improving the frequency and quality of neonate assessment during the first week of life, our innovation aims to tackle preventable neonatal deaths caused by delayed identification of illness. NeMo (neonatal monitoring) aims to task-shift neonatal assessment from CHWs to mothers and provide tools for them to identify neonatal illness in the first week of life. The NeMo system consists of a smartphone application to guide the mother through the assessment based on the evidence-based WHO guidelines and a proprietary ultra low-cost disposable sensor that measures the respiratory rate and temperature of the neonate. The mother will use the system everyday for the first week of the neonate’s life, allowing for more frequent assessment of the neonate compared to the current standard of care.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Brittany Allen, Taryn Amatruda, Phani Gaddipati, Arvind Mohan, Thai Nguyen
    Advisors: Youseph Yazdi, PhD, Soumyadipta Acharya, MD, PhD, Bashar Safar, MBBS, Steven Wexner, MD. Neil Hyman, MD, Joseph Carmichael, MD

    ABSTRACT

    There are over 320,000 colorectal resection surgeries performed annually in the United States. One of the most devastating complications associated with these surgeries is an anastomotic leak, which causes digestive contents and fecal matter to spill into the abdominal cavity. The spillage causes infection in the surrounding tissue, resulting in agonizing pain, septic shock, and even death. Every year, over 30,000 patients suffer from anastomotic leak, and over 7,000 patients die as a result. Although some innovations have attempted to address anastomotic leak, they have either not gained widespread adoption or have been removed from the market. Difficult deployment methods, complicated fixation mechanisms, and high migration rates have been cited by physicians to be the primary reasons behind these previous device failures. MedConnect is developing RemovAL: an intraluminal barrier to prevent the spillage of digestive contents into the abdominal cavity during the anastomosis’ critical healing period. It’s not only time-effective and easy to deploy, but it is passed naturally after several weeks, eliminating the need for an additional procedure. Even if an anastomotic perforation occurs, the intraluminal barrier prevents any leakage of fecal matter into the abdominal cavity. Without fecal matter escaping the bowel, the risk of infection and sepsis is greatly diminished. As a result, RemovAL will reduce the significant morbidity and mortality associated with colorectal resections. In addition, hospitals are highly incentivized to adopt RemovAL to reduce the high annual economic burden of $1.2 billion currently associated with anastomotic leak re-interventions.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Rachel An, Andrew Jann, Matthew Lerner, Polly Ma, Mohit Singhala
    Advisors: Bashir Zikria MD, John Wilckens MD, Russell Taylor, PhD, Soumyadipta Acharya MD, PhD, Aditya Polsani, BDS, MS

    ABSTRACT

    The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is a key ligament in knee function and stability. Over 750,000 people suffer from an ACL tear in the United States every year, and incidence rates are increasing every year. In order to restore the function of the ACL, an ACL reconstruction surgery is performed to replace the torn ACL with a graft. During a reconstruction surgery, the torn ACL is removed so the surgeon can see the original ACL attachment sites on the bone (known as the ACL footprints). Tunnels are then drilled into the femur and tibia bone to make anchor points for the graft. The graft is then passed through the tunnels and fixed in place. 400,000 ACL reconstruction procedures are performed every year in the United States. Of these, 20% fail due to incorrect tunnel placement, resulting in about 57,600 patients who undergo a revision surgery. This amounts to a $360 million cost to the healthcare system each year. For the patients, a failed reconstruction surgery can result in decreased range of knee motion, decreased knee stability, increased rehabilitation time, and for most cases, a revision surgery. As most of these injuries typically occur during physical activity and is more common for teens and adolescents, the return to the original quality of knee function is particularly important. Additionally, when these injuries occur for budding or high-profile athletes, an ACL tear can be especially devastating and has the potential to end a career. With current techniques and tools for ACL tunnel placements, it is difficult for surgeons to reproducibly create anatomical tunnel placements. This is especially true for less experienced surgeons, who perform less than 10 ACL reconstruction surgeries per year. Thus, our team proposes a solution – Orthotract – to provide orthopedic surgeons with a tool that will facilitate more anatomical and reproducible tunnel placements for ACL reconstruction surgeries, in order to reduce failures and revisions.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Tessa Bronez, Katherine Czerniejewski, Katie Kan, Arman Mosenia, Doran Walsten, Rachel Yung
    Advisors: Antoine Azar, MD, Jody Tversky, MD, Franklin Adkinson, MD, Emily Heil, PharmD, Jason Woo, MD, MBA, Michael Albert, MD

    ABSTRACT

    Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria adapt to reduce the effectiveness of drugs, and is expected to be a leading cause of death worldwide by 2050. The use of broader-spectrum antibiotics, such as vancomycin and fluoroquinolones, are known to result in the more resistant organisms connected to antibiotic resistance. In order to combat this, Former President Barack Obama issued a federal mandate for hospitals nationwide to implement antimicrobial stewardship programs over the next 5 years. These broader-spectrum antibiotics are commonly prescribed to the 30 million Americans reporting a penicillin allergy. The problem is that 90% of this population are not actually allergic and as such, are forcing physicians to prescribe these unnecessary alternatives resulting in poor patient outcomes and excessive medical expenditures. This is why most hospitals, in compliance with the federal mandate, are looking to implement penicillin allergy testing on the large-scale. There is currently a gold standard method to penicillin allergy testing with FDA-approved reagents, but only 0.1% of patients reporting a penicillin allergy have been tested because the test is only performed in allergy clinics. It is currently not applicable to the hospital setting due to the lack of time and trained personnel, so patients remain untested. PCN Medical offers a solution that addresses the challenge areas of current penicillin allergy testing and easily fits into the current workflow while still aligning with the accepted gold standard. For the short term, our team is focusing on developing AssistID: an EMR-integrated software application that determines the likeliness of a positive allergy for a patient given their clinical history and an automated precision injection technology. By answering specific questions relating to a patient’s history, the software determines the chances of a positive allergy for each patient. This result then supplies healthcare professionals with the proper information in order to move forward with the best testing and treatment protocol. The automated injection technology consists of a motorized base unit that is compatible with current syringes on the market and utilizes proprietary needle attachments that as a system, inject a solution precisely enough to form the necessary bleb to get a result.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Marc Chelala, Kyle Cowdrick, David Gullotti, Sritam Rout, Amir Soltanianzadeh, Maria Torres
    Advisors: Nicholas Theodore,MD, Daniel Sciubba, MD, Jean-Paul Wolinsky, MD, Mari Groves, MD, Jeff Siewerdsen, PhD, Amir Manbachi, PhD, Youseph Yazdi, PhD, Soumyadipta Acharya, MD, PhD., Mitchell Foster, Chuck Montague, PhD, Ashish Nimgaonkar, MD, Aditya Polsani, BDS, MS

    ABSTRACT

    Approximately 55,000 patients undergo corrective surgery for spinal deformity every year. These surgeries involve the placement of screws and rods to reconstruct the patient’s spine to correct for their misalignment. Despite efforts to obtain optimal outcomes, up to 68% of cases remain misaligned postoperatively. In addition, approximately 10% of these misaligned patients have severe enough residual deformity that they require revision surgeries, as spinal imbalance is strongly correlated with decreased quality of life. The patients who do not require revisions must live with this remaining deformity and associated reduced quality of life. Postoperative misalignment is attributed in part to the fact that tools for an intraoperative assessment of alignment are lacking. Currently, preoperative planning platforms allow the surgeon to simulate surgical techniques that should result in the optimal alignment outcomes for their patients. However, this workflow breaks down as there is not currently an adequate mechanism of feedback in the operating room to inform the surgeon with high fidelity if their alignment goals have been achieved. For instance, surgeons can intraoperatively obtain radiographs of the patient’s spine, but most intraoperative machines only offer a limited field of view (3-4 vertebrae at a time). In addition, these options entails excess radiation, significant disruption to workflow, and the challenge of assessing spinal alignment across the full spinal column (encompassing up to 25 vertebrae). SpineAlign proposes a novel platform that empowers the surgeon to make real-time, intraoperative assessments of alignment of the spine with an emphasis on minimizing disruption to the surgical workflow. Conceived by a highly interdisciplinary team of engineers, surgeons, and computer scientists, the high quality product offered by SpineAlign will improve the surgeon’s confidence during surgery, reduce the risk of postoperative misalignment, and will better enable all surgeons to achieve their desired alignment outcomes for their patient every time.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Brittany Allen, Katherine Czerniejewski, Phani Gaddipati, Arman Mosenia, Doran Walsten
    Advisors: Youseph Yazdi, PhD., Soumya Acharya, MD, PhD, Tigistu Adamu, MD, Rachel Willardson, Mike Shanley, James BonTempo, Ed Hutton

    ABSTRACT

    The World Health Organization estimates that up to 70% of all biomedical equipment in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is partially or completely nonfunctional, most of which can be repaired using generalized skills and no extra parts. The lack of functional biomedical equipment is one of the underlying problems contributing to the lack of access to essential surgical care for 5 billion people globally. Unavailability of biomedical equipment results in delays of surgery due to fewer available operating rooms and referrals to higher-level hospitals. Even when the necessary equipment is present, it might be only partially functioning and lead to a higher risk of complications or death. TechConnect leverages the existing network of smartphones to distribute troubleshooting and repair guides to hospital technicians. The guides interactively guide the technician through the process of troubleshooting and repair step-by-step, providing relevant media and resources exactly when they are relevant. It also enables communication between technicians and clinical engineers, allowing them to share tips and tricks. TechConnect, in collaboration with Jhpiego, is preparing to distribute the application to technicians across East Africa in June. By collecting feedback, TechConnect can continue to improve the biomedical equipment repair experience – a step closer to providing safe and affordable surgical care across the globe.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Marc Chelala, Kyle Cowdrick, David Gullotti, Sritam Rout, Amir Soltanianzadeh, Maria Torres
    Advisors: Soumyadipta Acharya, MD PhD; Youseph Yazdi, PhD; Jay Pasricha, MD; Ashish Nimgaonkar, MD, Mouen Khashab, MD; Vivek Kumbhari, MD; Nick Durr, PhD; George Coles, PhD; James Beaty, PhD, Aditya Polsani, BDS, MS

    Sponsor: Boston Scientific Endoscopy —Laura Christakis; Barry Weitzner; Jason Vankherhoven

    ABSTRACT

    With a population of 1.25 billion, 70% of patients living in rural villages, and a physician-patient ratio of 1:1674, there are distinct challenges for patient access to appropriate care in the Indian healthcare system. In partnership with Boston Scientific Endoscopy, our objective was to analyze both the technical and systemic challenges associated with Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in India to identify innovation targets that may increase patient access to ERCP in developing nations. Based on our insights from over 40 interviews with physicians in both India and the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, we have determined that a solution to facilitate the process of selective cannulation of the common bile duct during ERCP may have the highest clinical impact as it would reduce the training barriers for ERCP and increase the safety of the procedure. ERCP entails navigating an endoscope into the duodenum and gaining access into hepatobilitary tree to treat various diseases. At the start of the procedure the physician is tasked with threading a small guidewire (0.035” diameter) through a muscular sphincter to then enter the pancreaticobiliary tree in a process called “selective cannulation”. Once access has been established, physicians are able to perform therapies such as: retrieving obstructing gallstones, expanding tissue strictures, or placing a stent to relieve obstruction from malignancies. The most feared complication of this procedure is pancreatitis, which is a life-threatening condition that occurs in 5% of cases and is in part due to multiple failed cannulation attempts leading to tissue irritation. The high degree of technical skill and precision required for this procedure creates a steep learning curve, and it has been cited to require up to 400 cases for a physician to achieve an 80% success rate in selective cannulation. Our team is developing solutions to deskill the process of selective cannulation by addressing the two greatest challenges that our stakeholders have cited for performing ERCP: (1) visualization of the orientation of the common bile duct behind the papillary opening, and (2) increased control of the accessories (guidewire and sphincterotome) to decrease the risk of miscannulation into the pancreatic duct. Initial successes in ex-vivo experiments of our proof-of-concept prototypes have led us to pursue live porcine animal testing to validate their clinical efficacy. Results from the animal tests will further inform design decisions and future development iterations for this innovation target. We believe that our developments have the promise to positively impact therapeutic endoscopy by reducing training barriers for physicians and making safe ERCP more universally accessible for patients in the developing world.

Undergraduate

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Aine O’Sullivan, Andie Seabrooke, Clark Fischer, Olivia Musmanno, Jesse Rines, Emily Burnette, Varun Kedia, Ryan Lu
    Clinical Advisors: Clifford Weiss, MD
    Faculty Advisor: Dr. Robert Allen

    ABSTRACT

    The cholangiocarcinoma patient population represents 4.6% of cancer deaths in the United States annually with a 17.5% post-diagnostic 5-year survival rate. It is defined as a malignant tumor in the bile duct, and early and accurate diagnosis is critical for survival. The brush biopsy is the standard of care as a non-invasive initial diagnostic tool in determining the malignancy of a bile duct lesion. However, the current brush biopsy has significant shortcomings, with a sensitivity between 23% and 71% depending on the study. This corresponds to a high false-negative rate, forcing patients to undergo more invasive and more dangerous biopsy techniques as much as 38% of the time. The CytoBloom Biopsy seeks to eliminate the need for more invasive biopsy techniques by collecting a superior cellular yield, enabling pathologists to determine an accurate diagnosis after a single non-invasive biopsy procedure.

    The CytoBloom team is developing a non-invasive, easy to use, accurate and reliable biopsy device that is reinventing the way bile duct cancer is diagnosed.

  • The Team

    Student Team: Akash Premkumar, Christine Adib, Srisha Kotlo, Michael Murphy, Pranay Orugunta, Sarah Abella, Shubhayu Bhattacharyay, Samiksha Ramesh
    Clinical Advisors: Peter Gehlbach, M.D., Ph.D.
    Faculty Advisor: Dr. Robert Allen

    Abstract

    Chronic hypotony is a condition characterized by extended periods of low intraocular pressure. It is estimated that chronic hypotony affects 24,000 individuals in the United States, with an incidence rate of 7,300 cases per year. Individuals with chronic hypotony experience vision loss, ocular pain, and physical disfigurement of the eye; the prevalence of these issues increases as intraocular pressure falls.
    The end stage condition of chronic hypotony, known as phthisis bulbi, occurs when intraocular pressure drops to zero and the eye collapses; the result is a shrunken, painful, and nonfunctional eye which is often removed.
    Despite the severe outcomes associated with chronic hypotony, current treatments are few in number and are widely regarded to be ineffective. Due to the overwhelming lack of effective treatments for this devastating disorder, there is an urgent need for a long-term solution that raises intraocular pressure and consistently maintains it within the normal physiological range.

  • The Team

    Student Team: Alexandra Berges, Thomas Athey, Vinay Ayyappan, Megan Callanan, Alanna Farrell, Schuyler Metzger, Richard Shi, Valerie Zawicki
    Clinical Advisors: Nicholas Durr, PhD, Susan Harvey, MD, Sughra Raza, MD, Elizabeth Logsdon, PhD, George Coles, Richard Hughen, MD, Su Lucas, MD, Anne Rositch, MD

    Abstract

    Breast cancer leads to half a million deaths annually and disproportionately affects developing countries due to an uneven distribution of diagnostic equipment. Women must travel far to urban hospitals, resulting in significant diagnostic delays, late stage presentations, and higher fatality rates. Healthcare providers in low resource settings lack the necessary biopsy equipment to extract tumor tissue for pathological analysis due to the high cost of disposable core needle biopsy devices (CNB). Additionally, reusable CNB devices are currently not utilized due to the risk of internal contamination. This leads to the prevalence of invasive and risky surgical biopsy procedures. To overcome these obstacles, our team is building an intuitive,
    affordable, and reusable core needle biopsy device that will eliminate the risk of contamination.
    Our device’s innovative design, featuring a reusable driver and a disposable needle, will be used by mid-level providers to increase access to breast cancer diagnosis in developing countries.

    Top Row: Valerie Zawicki, Vinay Ayyappan, Megan Callanan, Thomas Athey, Richard Shi Bottom Row: Alanna Farrell, Alexandra Berges (team leader), Schuyler Metzger

  • The Team

    Student Team: Bailey Surtees, Serena Thomas, Tara Blair, Sean Young, Clarisse Hu
    Clinical Advisors: Susan Harvey, MD, Nicholas Durr, PhD

    Abstract

    Breast Cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women worldwide, and while 5- year survival rates are nearing 90% in the US, they are nearly half that in many low and middle income countries. Our invention is a cryoablation device that will be used to treat cancer in low and middle-income countries. In cryotherapy, cancer cells are frozen and killed by heat exchange between the tumor and cryoprobe which is cooled via the Joule-Thomson Effect. This treatment method is commonly used in the United States for other types of cancer; however, these cryoablation devices generally use argon gas, cost upwards of $2000 per probe, and are not reusable. Our team has developed a cryotherapy tip that is autoclavable, and uses carbon dioxide, a gas readily available in our targeted market, thus making the treatment more affordable and accessible.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Clayton Andrews, Melissa Austin, Eric Cao, Alexander Glavin, Talia Kirschbaum, Theodore Lee, Pooja Nair, Harrison Nguyen
    Clinical Advisors: Robert Allen, PhD, Patrick Byrne, MD

    ABSTRACT

    Restricted nasal breathing is one of the most common complaints heard by otolaryngologists (ENTs) every day. This symptom is indicative of nasal obstruction, which is often caused by a narrowing or collapse of the internal nasal valve. The leading treatment for this condition is surgical reconstruction of the nasal passages, however approximately 34% of patients experience worsened symptoms postoperatively due to permanent scarring and swelling. In contrast, simply pressing outward against the internal nasal valve with a cotton swab completely relieves symptoms of obstruction in 89% of patients. While this maneuver is currently used as a diagnostic tool, we see an opportunity to develop a non-surgical device that emulates this technique to counteract nasal obstruction. To this end, we are developing a comfortable and discreet nasal dilator that is inserted into obstructed nostrils to open the airways and facilitate breathing.

  • The Team

    Student Team: Eric Chiang, Kali Barnes, Stephanie Cai, Conan Chen, Anshul Subramanya, Akash Chaurasia, Allison Rosen, Parth Vora
    Clinical Advisors: Allen Eghrari, MD

    Abstract

    Every year, over 75,000 corneal transplants, or keratoplasties, are performed. Of all keratoplasties, a large proportion are partial keratoplasties, which in turn have two varieties: Descemet’s Stripping Endothelial Keratoplasty (DSAEK) and Descemet’s Membrane Endothelial Keratoplasty (DMEK). DMEK is a much more effective surgery providing higher patient outcomes and quicker recovery times. However, the transplanted DMEK graft is very difficult to manipulate; as a result, surgeons are hesitant to adopt the procedure due to its high variability in operation time and a steep learning curve. To alleviate these issues, we have developed both a novel DMEK graft delivery device that complements a new workflow optimized for this procedure. In this new workflow, high risk steps that are typically undertaken by the surgeon are instead offloaded to eye bank technicians. We have thus designed our injector with both the technician and surgeon in mind as stakeholders.

    Design Team 6: (from left) Allison Rosen, Akash Chaurasia, Stephanie Cai, Conan Chen, Kali Barnes, Eric Chiang, Parth Vora, Anshul Subramanya

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Richard Chen, Seony Han, Sami Messai, Becca Miller, Erica Schwarz, Prerna Singh, Aditya Murali, Elizabeth Wu
    Clinical Advisor: Nicholas Durr, PhD, Christopher Brady, MD

    Abstract

    Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a vision-impairing retinal disease that occurs in preterm infants and can account for up to 60% of childhood blindness worldwide. Due to a shortage of ophthalmologists to perform ROP screenings, a deskilled method is needed to take ocular images suitable for diagnosis of ROP so that all at-risk infants can be effectively screened.
    Our team is developing a retinal imaging system that will increase the screening capacities of NICUs and improve the overall standard of care for ROP. To that end we have created Kaleyedos: a low-cost imaging device that utilizes a novel illumination method in tandem with a custom software suite that together deskills the screening process, increases image quality, and integrates seamlessly with a telemedicine pipeline.

  • THE TEAM

    Student Team: Steven Chen, Prateek Gowda, Joanna Guo, Jake Dohyung Kim, Anil Palepu, Tatiana Gelaf Romer, Miguel Sobral, Andrew Tsai
    Clinical Advisor: Clifford Weiss, MD, Nicholas Durr, PhD

    ABSTRACT

    For 85% of liver cancer patients with unresectable tumors, the standard of care is transarterial embolization therapy, a procedure in which the blood supply to a tumor is blocked via injection of embolic particles into the tumor site using a microcatheter. Currently, physicians monitor embolization procedures and decide on an endpoint using subjective visual cues. This prevents them from accurately assessing the extent to which the tumor is embolized. In particular, physicians often cannot detect when they have over- embolized, which can lead to retrograde flow of embolic particles and embolization of off-target sites, both of which can cause serious toxicities. Therefore, interventional radiologists need an objective method to consistently deliver an optimal quantity of embolic agents, in order to prevent unintended non-target embolization and retrograde reflux.

    The novel catheter technology we are developing 1) measures pressure in and around the tumor vasculature in real time and 2) associates the observed pressure change with degree of embolization, allowing for prevention of reflux of embolic particles and off-target embolization.

    Top row: Prateek Gowda, Miguel Sobral, Andrew Tsai, Steven Chen
    Bottom row: Anil Palepu, Jake Dohyung Kim, Joanna Guo, Tatiana Gelaf Romer

  • The Team

    Student Team: Graeme Steller, Victor Dadfar, Saki Fujita, Qinwen Huang, Jin Young Sohn, Sindhu Banerjee, Richard Guo, Isaree Pitaktong
    Clinical Advisor: Robert Allen, PhD, Hien Nguyen, MD, FACS

    Abstract

    Coronary artery disease, which affects 16.8 million people in the US, is effectively managed by the long-term use of prescription medications. Many patients do not benefit optimally from these medications because 50~80% of them are nonadherent, which has shown to increase patient morbidity, decrease quality of life, and incur significant healthcare costs. Currently, there is no way for physicians to verify whether a patient has taken their medications. This is a problem because patients typically do not remember, and they tend to overreport adherence to make themselves look good, which gives physicians a skewed understanding of what patients are taking and sets the stage for prescription errors as well as missed treatment. Our team is developing a way to verify adherence while motivating patients in their pill taking routine in order to mitigate these aforementioned risks.

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Jon Hochstein, Nolan Benner, Rohith Bhethanabotla, Candice Gard, Fernando Vicente
    Clinical Advisors: Robert Allen, PhD, Emma Bigelow, BS, Douglas Mogul, MD, PhD, Elizabeth Logsdon, PhD, John Hickey, PhD

    Abstract

    TacPac aims to provide at-home therapeutic drug monitoring of immunosuppressive drug tacrolimus. Given to 90% of the 300,000 transplant-patients in the U.S., tacrolimus is the #1 recommended drug for turning the immune system on “sleep mode”. Its narrow therapeutic range results in unnecessary hospitalizations and retransplantations: subtherapeutic levels ensue organ rejection and supratherapeutic levels are associated with tacrolimus nephrotoxicity, diabetes and various neuropsychiatric problems among other side effects. While clinical laboratories are equipped with multiple tacrolimus detection devices, their infrastructure and workflow does not permit frequent and convenient tracking of the tacrolimus levels. With a strong commitment to better the lives of transplant-patients, TacPac is set to miniaturize and completely automate current diagnostic practices in order to serve our clients with at-home diagnostics, therapeutic monitoring and better medical outcomes.

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Larissa Chan, Alicia Coronado, Katherine Hu, Michael Koo, Maya Lapinski, Gavin Mischler, Ryan Najmi, Josh Punnoose
    Clinical Advisors: Robert Allen, PhD, Rachel Seay, MD

    Abstract

    Every 10 minutes, a woman in the United States will face a pregnancy-related complication and a majority of these complications will result from postpartum hemorrhage (PPH). The incidence of PPH has been on the rise, occurring in 125,000 cases annually leading to a 4% increase in maternal mortality.
    Defined as a blood loss of more than 500 mL after birth, PPH occurs when the uterus is too weak to contract upon its blood vessels. While non-invasive solutions provide a fertility preserving method of stopping hemorrhage, the current standard of care suffers from a 20% failure rate, forcing obstetric care providers to resort to invasive treatments. Thus obstetric care providers require a non-invasive method to establish hemostatic stability in patients with PPH, thereby reducing the use of invasive treatments.

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Shohini Ghosh, Yunchan Chen, Himanshu Dashora, Jacqueline Lanzaro, Akash Monpara
    Clinical Advisors: Nicholas Durr, Ph.D., Ryan Woods, M.D., M.P.H.

    Abstract

    In the US, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality among women. Our team is working to improve axillary nodal staging – a procedure where the lymph nodes are evaluated for cancer. The condition of these nodes is a strong predictor of recurrence and informs therapy decisions.The current standard-of-care involves ultrasound-guided biopsy of abnormal nodes and placement of metallic marker clips for later identification. Treatment guidelines require metastatic node removal during surgery, but nodes can appear normal after chemotherapy and cannot always be differentiated from healthy nodes.Surgeons confirm removal of biopsied metastatic nodes based on localization wires placed prior to surgery. However, sensitive structures in the area make this procedure risky. As a result, breast cancer radiologists and surgeons need a way to locate known cancerous lymph nodes in the axilla to increase removal of positive nodes during axillary surgery.

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Shriya Aswathi, Mark Suprenant, Raymon Cao, Arnav Malhotra, Amy Xiao
    Clinical Advisors:  David C. Hile, MD, James K. Gilman, MD

    Abstract

    Currently, over 60% of preventable battlefield deaths are due to uncontrolled extremity hemorrhage, which translates to about 165 deaths per year. The current standard of care, the Combat Application Tourniquet (CAT), has an unacceptably high complication rate, and is applied incorrectly around 47% of the time. To make matters worse, the CAT is often not sufficient to fully occlude blood flow in the limb. Furthermore, the CAT has a safe time of only about 2 hours, while military evacuations can take anywhere from 30 minutes to 16 hours.
    Design Team 13 aims to solve this problem by designing an automated tourniquet that can last up to 48 hours while calculating and adjusting, based on various physiological factors, to the minimum limb occlusion pressure (LOP), thus allowing for a safer, longer lasting solution.

    Clockwise from top left: Ronan Perry, Raymon Cao, Debanik Purkayastha, Amy Xiao, Mark Suprenant, Jerry Yan, Arnav Malhotra

  • The Team

    Student Team:  Siavash Parkhideh, Max Lu, Haroon Ghori, Lauren Fang, Jonathan Smith, Jackelyn Navar, Teya Bergamaschi, Danielle Vaithilingam
    Clinical Advisor: Peter L. Gehlbach, MD, PhD, Robert Allen, PhD, PE

    Abstract

    Every year, 20,000 patients with damaged capsular support undergo a procedure known as artificial lens fixation. However, historical and current methods for lens fixation are problematic for both patients and physicians: the procedure requires risky, challenging maneuvers that compromise intraoperative safety and contribute to postoperative complications (3-12%). Ophthalmologists need a means to perform artificial lens fixation without risky, challenging maneuvers in order to reduce long-term complications (e.g. lens dislocation, uveitis, cystoid macular edema, and iris capture). To date, we have brainstormed and prototyped our top solution concepts, and we plan to perform mechanical, ex-vivo, and animal testing.

Johns Hopkins University

Johns Hopkins University, Whiting School of Engineering

Department of Biomedical Engineering

Center for Bioengineering Innovation & Design

3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218-2608

410-516-8006 | [email protected]

The Johns Hopkins Center for Bioengineering Innovation & Design