Biomedical Engineering

Exploiting the Synergy Between Engineering and Life
Sciences
Exploiting the synergy between engineering and the life sciences,
Draper is working on some of today’s most critical healthcare
problems and partnering with leading medical and research
institutions and pharmaceutical organizations to develop innovative
diagnostics and therapies for clinical and defense needs.
Under contract to the military, Draper is developing technologies
to address traumatic brain injury, massive internal hemorrhaging,
detection of infectious pathogens like malaria, and rapid diagnosis
of environmental pathogens and toxins. For healthcare at home,
Draper is working on detection of epileptic seizures, early detection
of the onset of sepsis, painless methods of monitoring hypoglycemia
or hyperglycemia for diabetics, means to prevent hearing loss for
patients undergoing chemotherapy, tools to remove vocal cord
tumors while minimizing speech loss, and developing surgical
instruments to remove diseased organs without breaking the skin.
Two programs are investigating means to develop very low-cost but
rapid detection of active tuberculosis, a device that will be used in
third-world countries. Draper is also supporting pharmaceutical and
biological researchers in detecting drug toxicity to prevent illnessor death from new drugs, imaging systems that will accelerate the
development of stem cells, and developing a sensor so small it can
detect the effect of new drugs inside living cells.
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Massachusetts Eye and Ear
Infirmary, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Johns Hopkins
Medical School, Tufts Medical School, and Brigham and Women’s
Hospital are just some of the medical institutions with which Draper
is collaborating.
The future holds much promise as the Laboratory looks to expand
contributions to government agencies, commercial companies, and
foundations, while helping the U.S. maintain the finest healthcare
system in the world. Draper seeks to have its technologies in
products and available to troops around the world, to care givers in
sub-Saharan Africa, and to medical and pharmaceutical researchers
within several years.
Implantable Therapeutics and Diagnostics
With advances made possible by implantable devices such as
cochlear implants, stents, pacemakers, and defibrillators, medical
science is poised for better solutions for organ replacement and
implantable drug-delivery devices. Draper’s MEMS technology
offers promising solutions for both needs.
For patients suffering from diseased organs such as the heart, lungs,
liver, or kidney, the need for engineering artificial organs is pressing.
Draper’s three-dimensional MEMS structures are enabling artificial
organ development, minimizing blood clotting, maintaining cellular
phenotype, efficiently distributing oxygen, and filtering toxins from
these systems.
Draper’s MEMS technology also is showing promise as a new
platform for human tissue models for early stage, high-throughput
drug screening. It can address the problem the pharmaceutical
industry is struggling with to establish functional cell culture models
for evaluating the safety and efficacy of new compounds.
Point-of-Care (POC) Diagnostics
Rapid diagnosis of disease is important for patients and in reducing
healthcare costs. Three technologies being developed at Draper
hold potential for rapid POC diagnostics: breath analysis, MEMS
chemical/biological sensing devices, and nanosensors.
Certain diseases manifest themselves in a person’s breath. While
researchers have advanced the science of breath analysis of cardiac
problems, diabetes, and other diseases, no products are readily
available or suitable in size or simplicity to aid such diagnoses.
Draper has simplified and miniaturized the detection and means to
detect tuberculosis. Using technology partner Sionex’s ion mobility
spectrometer, Draper is developing a hand-held device small enough
to fit in a shirt pocket, accurate enough to detect emissions from
bacteria in the lung, and cost effective enough for use with patients
in the Third World. Most importantly, it can detect the disease in
minutes.
Draper’s continued refinement of MEMS has led to the development of
a number of successful sensors, such as ASES, a small sensor capable
of detecting minute amounts of chemical or biological material.
Current applications are being developed to detect tuberculosis in
bodily fluids and other tropical diseases. Its small size will make it
competitive with other low-cost detection technologies, yet it offers
increased benefits in improved consistency and accuracy.
Draper’s smallest sensor is nano in size – so small it can fit benignly
within a living cell. These sensors are being developed to assist
pharmaceutical companies in evaluating new drugs. Further,
implanted within human skin, they will be used to revolutionize the
methods for continuously monitoring blood, eliminating the need
for lancing to get samples.
Medical Informatics
Draper is integrating and applying its technologies in image
analysis, signal processing, data mining, and visualization to create
highly effective medical information systems. These systems are of
value to researchers in automatically analyzing cellular behavior;
to clinical trial managers looking for adverse affects of therapies in
human subjects; and to physicians looking for trends indicating the
onset of illness. Such powerful tools are advancing the extraction of
valuable medical information in a timely manner.
Contact
Information: busdev@draper.com