Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Doctor, team get tricorder gold star

They push limits for $2.6M prize

- KAREN HELLER

A seven-member, selffunded team consisting of four siblings won the internatio­nal X Prize tricorder consumer medical competitio­n — yes, inspired by the Star Trek gizmo — besting 312 entrants from 38 countries, many with corporate and government backing.

Final Frontier Medical Devices, led by Basil Harris, a suburban Philadelph­ia emergency room doctor, won the $2.6 million top prize.

The open competitio­n, started in 2012, challenged applicants to produce a lightweigh­t, affordable health kit that diagnoses and interprets 13 health conditions and continuous­ly monitors five vital signs. The team’s kit, equipped with noninvasiv­e sensors, collects informatio­n that is synthesize­d on a diagnostic device — an iPad in the competitio­n, but it could ultimately work on a smartphone.

Harris’ only invention before the competitio­n was a cotton candy machine he made with his brothers in grade school.

Dynamical Biomarkers Group, which began with a group of 50 physicians, scientists and programmer­s, many of them paid for their work, was awarded the $1 million second prize. The team was led by Harvard Medical School professor C.K. Peng, a physicist with a 29-page resume, and was backed by the Taiwanese cellphone giant HTC and the Taiwanese government.

Harris and his team built the 65 required kits for testing using a trio of 3-D printers in his home office. Each plastic part took as long as 24 hours to fabricate, and Harris’ three children, ages 11-15, often oversaw the sanding and wiring. HTC produced the models for Peng’s team.

In the original Star Trek, Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy would use the tricorder to scan and instantly diagnose a patient.

The competitio­n’s tricorder, weighing 5 pounds or less, has the potential to revolution­ize home health care. It can tell a person whether he has pneumonia or diabetes or other conditions, while monitoring the person’s blood pressure, heart rate and other vital signs. Additional­ly, it can share real-time informa-

tion with medical profession­als and could help millions of patients in medically underserve­d communitie­s.

And it would arrive 250 years ahead of the one imagined in the original Star Trek.

The X Prize, funded by the Qualcomm Foundation, has committed $3.8 million toward continued consumer

testing and developmen­t for the two top teams and four semifinali­sts. The organizati­on will also provide both groups with support in Food and Drug Administra­tion testing, in securing production and marketing, and in creating a documentar­y and museum exhibit about the tricorder’s potential.

Harris has applied for seven patents, including a potentiall­y revolution­ary device for testing blood — glucose,

hemoglobin and white-blood cell count — by using a finger cuff instead of the lancet that can be the bane of a diabetic’s existence.

The global market is large enough to support both tricorders, both team leaders said before the announceme­nt. The companies that manufactur­e the products stand to make millions.

Harris’ tricorder has the capability of diagnosing 34 conditions. “Without the

weight limit, we could perhaps test for 50 diseases,” Peng said.

Harris recalled how he felt when he entered the competitio­n four years ago.

“It was intimidati­ng because there were all these groups being backed by large corporatio­ns,” he said before the prize announceme­nt. “But we were always thinking beyond the X Prize. We’ve met our objectives. We’ve made something worthwhile.”

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