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June 29,
2007 |
Meet
Robopsy
A
team of MGH radiologists and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
graduate students won top honors in the 2007 MIT $100K Entrepreneurship
Competition May 16. Jo-Anne Shepard, MD, director of Thoracic Radiology,
and Rajiv Gupta, MD, PhD, director of the Ultra-high Resolution Volume
CT Lab, teamed up with Conor Walsh and Nevan Hanumara, MIT mechanical
engineering doctoral candidates (shown above from left) under
professor Alex Slocum, PhD, to design a robot that aids clinicians in
performing tumor biopsies. The team won $30,000, which they will use to
form a company to produce and market their device, called Robopsy, a robotic,
remote-controlled needle inserter.
A needle biopsy is a minimally invasive procedure used to obtain tissue
samples in order to make a diagnosis. The idea for Robopsy came to Gupta
while he was observing biopsies — typically performed manually —
while he was a radiology resident at the MGH. In the fall of 2004, Gupta
presented his idea for Robopsy to the Center for the Integration of Medicine
and Innovative Technology (CIMIT) and to Slocum's Precision Machine Design
class, which has a standing relationship with CIMIT. MIT students accepted
Gupta's challenge and used a $4,000 CIMIT grant to build a prototype.
The team created a business plan for their invention, which was then entered
in the MIT competition. Robopsy was the grand prize winner in the venture
category.
A second generation prototype of Robopsy is currently being tested. It
is hoped that the use of this device will reduce biopsy procedure time
by 30 minutes and decrease patient risk. Says Shepard, "Radiologists
are increasingly asked to biopsy smaller and more challenging lesions.
Robopsy was developed to improve the precision of needle placement in
a more time-efficient way. We hope that ultimately it will improve patient
care." Gupta adds, "CIMIT, MIT and the MGH were able to create
this device collaboratively. Robopsy was a true team effort."
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