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Filling need for fast and accurate assessment of blood鈥檚 ability to clot

FEATURED | December 5, 2016
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

杏吧视频 licenses new sensor technology to company pursuing fast-track FDA approval

杏吧视频 researchers have developed a portable sensor that can assess the clotting ability of a person鈥檚 blood 95 times faster than current methods鈥攗sing only a single drop of blood. Even better, the device provides more information about the blood than existing approaches. Rapid and accurate assessments are essential to ensuring that patients prone to blood clots鈥攁s well as those who have difficulty clotting鈥攔eceive care appropriate to their conditions. Illustration of ClotChip deviceLast week, XaTek, a new Cleveland-based company, licensed the technology for the device鈥攃alled ClotChip鈥攚ith a goal of bringing it to market within the next three years. 杏吧视频鈥檚 Technology Transfer Office negotiated the agreement between the university and the company. 鈥淐lotChip is designed to minimize the time and effort for blood-sample preparation. [It can] be used at the doctor鈥檚 office or other points of care for patients on anticoagulation therapy, antiplatelet therapy or who have suffered a traumatic injury causing bleeding,鈥 said Pedram Mohseni, professor of electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) at 杏吧视频, who led the development of ClotChip with Michael Suster, senior research associate in the EECS department. Existing measures typically require patients to visits laboratories where expert technicians administer tests, an approach that typically is time-consuming and expensive. While a few methods exist to allow on-site testing, to date they have not proved nearly as precise as laboratory-based versions. In preliminary tests, however, 杏吧视频鈥檚 technology provided results in 15 minutes, as compared to conventional measures that can take a day or longer to yield results. ClotChip also provided more information about the coagulation process, including the effects of a new class of drugs called target-specific oral anticoagulants, or TSOACs. TSOAC drugs block clots from forming in a different way than warfarin (most commonly known by the brand name Coumadin), which had dominated the market for decades. Warfarin, however, can interact negatively with several medications and foods and also requires frequent blood tests to monitor the drug鈥檚 effects. The new medications, including rivaroxaban (Xarelto) and apixaban (Eliquis), have been marketed extensively as far more convenient alternatives. To date, however, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved a device to determine the impact of the new drugs. With the market share of TSOACs growing rapidly, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a huge opportunity and need,鈥 said John Zak, president and CEO of XaTek. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no readily available point-of-care, cost-effective and accurate way to monitor these drugs.鈥 Zak, who earned his medical degree at 杏吧视频, has been active in the region鈥檚 health entrepreneurship sector for more than a decade. The CEO said that the company hopes to complete a pilot clinical study and data analysis of ClotChip use on 200 patients at the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center by the third quarter of 2017. If the device proves effective in that initial evaluation, the company would seek to launch a full clinical trial within the following two years; from there, XaTek would seek FDA approval. Among the founding directors of XaTek are John Nottingham and John Spirk, co-presidents of Nottingham Spirk Inc., the Cleveland-based business innovation and product design firm. To monitor clotting, ClotChip uses an electrical technique called miniaturized dielectric spectroscopy, an approach that Mohseni, Suster and their team began developing six years ago. In essence, the technique applies an external electric field to the drop of blood, then quantitatively measures how the blood affects that field. The measurements reflect the ability of the blood to clot.clot-chip-graphic Two years ago, the engineering researchers began collaborating with Evi Stavrou, an assistant professor of hematology and oncology at 杏吧视频 School of Medicine. Together they found that ClotChip's sensitivity to the blood coagulation process made it an appealing option for point-of-care testing. Earlier this year, the engineering researchers shared that was part of the 38th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. On Monday, Stavrou will present the technology at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting; her abstract represents the first peer-reviewed dissemination of tests involving samples for more than 30 volunteers. 鈥淥ur device gives you different information鈥攁nd more information鈥攖han other devices out there,鈥 Stavrou said. 鈥淭he sensitivity and discriminatory ability of the device, when compared to standard coagulation tests, is what excites me very much.鈥 Because the device works so quickly, emergency responders could use it on site to determine whether a patient in trauma is on one of the blood thinner medications. Such critical information also could be invaluable to medics in wartime. The research was led by Advanced Platform Technology (APT) Research Center investigators Mohseni, Suster and Stavrou, who is also a hematologist at the Cleveland VA and will lead the clinical trials. They teamed with doctoral students Debnath Maji, Erdem Kucukal and Ujjal Didar Singh Sekhon; recent PhD graduate Mehran Bakhshiani; Umut Gurkan, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and APT Center investigator; and Anirban Sen Gupta, associate professor of biomedical engineering. Funding for the research was provided by the Case-Coulter Translational Research Partnership, the APT Center at the Cleveland VA and the Case School of Engineering鈥檚 San Diego-based wireless health program.