Four other finalists
The choice that received the most votes from the audience was Ezalife’s Button Huggie, a device for securing gastrostomy and cecostomy buttons. It includes a reusable, child-proof lid with a disposable, biodegradable, gauze sponge and a base layer held in place with a long-wearing adhesive. This prevents button movement in the tract, which can delay wound healing and lead to complications. In addition, the Button Huggie is much easier to put in place. “Our device is novel, with no direct competitors,” said CTO/COO Tyler Mironuck.
Currently patients are advised to fasten gastrostomy and cecostomy buttons with tape, but the buttons are dislodged 7% of the time, he said. The company estimates that patients spend an average of $100 a month on tape and gauze. The Button Huggie can be manufactured for $56, and the company envisions selling them for $300.
The device is exempt from needing a 510K FDA approval, so it can get to the market quickly. Nevertheless, the company is conducting a clinical trial with 200 patients at five children’s hospitals, Mr. Mironuck said.
NovaScan was a finalist for nsCanary, a device that uses electrical impedance to detect cancer. The device hinges on the company’s discovery that the Cole relaxation frequency is orders of magnitude different for cancerous and benign tissue, yet not affected by mass. By measuring this frequency, the nsCanary can find cancer in tissue acquired through biopsy forceps, snare polypectomy, mucosal resection, and endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle biopsy. It works in seconds without the need to interpret images.
Atlas Endoscopy was recognized for REN, a robotic colonoscopy system. The operator uses an external actuating magnet above the patient to guide a disposable ultracompliant endoscope through the colon. The company says this form of navigation prevents looping, reduces pain, and minimizes tissue stress.
Limaca Medical was recognized for Precision, a motorized, automated, rotational cutting and coring needle for endoscopic ultrasound biopsy. Manual biopsy needles now on the market require repeat passes in and out of the endoscope to obtain fragments of tissue, but Precision obtains larger intact samples of tumor tissue in a single pass.
Dr. Sethi has served as a consultant for Boston Scientific, Medtronic and Olympus; as a board member for EndoSound and has received grant support from FUJIFILM.