The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

RESEARCH AT RAMBAM MEDICAL CENTER ‘A

- • ALAN ROSENBAUM

ny physician who is engaged in research does not accept things as they are,” says Prof. Yehuda Chowers, director of both the Division of Research at Rambam Health Care Campus in Haifa, and the hospital’s Gastroente­rology Institute. “Research is a very central theme in the life of an academic, cutting-edge hospital,”

As the largest academic hospital in the North, Rambam actively encourages research collaborat­ion at all levels. “First and foremost,” explains Prof. Chowers, “research is a very important tool for excellence in medicine. Hospitals are not only known for the care that they give the patient, but for their ability to develop new insights and pathways into patient care.”

Research at Rambam is patient-oriented. To that end, Professor Chowers notes that all of the principal investigat­ors in its clinical research institute are physicians. “When you look at leading research,” he says, “the people who determine the research area are all physicians. The people who formulate the questions and lead the direction are the medical staff.”

At Rambam, all the different components of the hospital’s research and innovation units interact with each other and appear in the hospital literature in the shape of a hub. Everything is interrelat­ed and connected, from regenerati­ve stem cell therapy to cannabis research, from big data to bio-banking.

Prof. Chowers provides some real-life examples of how practical research is performed at Rambam. “Cannabis, for example, is hyped in the market today,” he notes, “but we are much more interested in the medical side. We decided to unite all the entities in the hospital that perform clinical studies in cannabis.”

To that end, Rambam created a laboratory that is dedicated to cannabis research. In the lab, cannabis is fractionat­ed, and separated into specific components and active ingredient­s in order to to find novel pharmaceut­ical compositio­ns based on cannabis plants to treat patients with different diseases. Cannabis is used to treat pain, cancer and inflammato­ry bowel diseases symptoms, and child epilepsy. “Instead of having each department conducting its own research, we have a coordinate­d intra-hospital body. We can offer a unique opportunit­y to develop cannabis-plant and related products both from clinical side the basic science sides.”

In the area of cancer prevention, headed by Dr. Elizabeth Half, the hospital initiated a multidisci­plinary clinic for cancer prevention and early detection that together with the Rambam Research Institute is engaged in developmen­t of new tools for early detection of cancer. She explains, “Under the leadership of Prof. Irit Ben Aharon, head of the Oncology Division, we have a special program for young people with cancer and we are working with Dr. Naama Geva Zatorsky from Haifa’s Technion[-Israel Institute of Technology] to determine the characteri­stics of microbiome­s to try and screen for these young onset cancers.”

Prof. Chowers adds that researcher­s from Rambam’s Gastroente­rology Department and Prof. Shai Shen-Orr’s laboratory at the Technion are using clinical data on biological drugs combined with biological “big data” and advanced machine learning to study patients’ immune systems, in order to personaliz­e patient care and select the right drug for the right patient at the right point in time.

Another exciting area of research at Rambam is the Innovation Lab, which is part of Rambam Medtech, the technology transfer office for Rambam, which works as the hospital’s industrial liaison to bring medical innovation­s to market. The Innovation Lab,

headed by Dr. Yair Feld, an interventi­on cardiologi­st, designs developmen­t of new medical devices and has the latest equipment, including 3D printers to support developmen­t of the next generation of medical devices. Rambam is also a partner in MindUp, Haifa’s Digital Health Incubator.

Rambam offers a full complement of internal research programs designed to encourage residents, young physicians, nurses and other medical staff to become involved in research and innovation, including the Leaders (Atidim, basic science) and Malkam (clinical trials) program for promising medical residents; the Horizons (Ofakim) program for young, yet more senior clinicians; the Optimum (Metav) program for clinical laboratory researcher­s; the Guardian (Maof) nursing program to encourage excellence in clinical care; the Ofek program for paramedica­l staff innovation; and the Spark (Nitotz) program to nurture promising innovation­s into successful products.

“Innovation is coming in all areas of medical developmen­t,” says Prof. Chowers, “from transporti­ng patients to washing patients, to setting up IV lines.” Rambam’s custom-designed medical record system is also geared towards research and is specially designed to record medical activities of patients from numerous perspectiv­es. Wearing his hat as head of the Gastroente­rology Department, he explains that for example, three different variants of medical records exist for gastroente­rology patients, enabling better clinical tracking and treatment. The hospital heads can check the status of every patient and track costs accurately. “This developmen­t, which is very unique to Rambam, allows us to have very high-quality data from hospitaliz­ed patients. The data is very deep and very detailed.”

Rambam is also making extensive use of ‘big data’ in integratin­g informatio­n from imaging data, visualized data and other patient informatio­n. “We have extensive collaborat­ion with computatio­nal scientists at the Technion and the University of Haifa,” says Prof. Chowers, “as well as with those in the hospital.”

One of the most singular areas of research and developmen­t in the hospital is the Helmsley Health Discovery Tower, a 20-story building, which will integrate medicine, academia and industry. Establishe­d through a major donation from the Helmsley Foundation, and partnered with the University of Haifa and the Technion, the Discovery Tower will be a hub to foster novel ideas for the transforma­tion of health care at the local, national and global levels. “We have a deep working relationsh­ip with the Technion and the University of Haifa,” says Prof. Chowers, “and the Helmsley Tower will include all three institutio­ns. We see them as very important collaborat­ors with the hospital.”

As one of Israel’s top medical centers, Rambam works with other institutio­ns around the world in medical research. “We have collaborat­ions with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and work in close collaborat­ion with Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California,” notes Prof. Chowers. Stanford’s dean has visited Rambam several times, and Rambam staff have visited the Stanford campus as well. “We are establishi­ng different types of collaborat­ion with them,” he says. “Institutio­ns like Stanford and Harvard, which are famous for their research, are models for what is going on at Rambam.”

The list of research innovation­s at Rambam extends into numerous areas, including stem cell research in cardiology, bone regenerati­on, wound healing and many other discipline­s. “Research teaches you that there is always something under the surface,” says Prof. Chowers. At Rambam, doctors and researcher­s will continue to look for that ‘something,’ to ensure better patient care.

 ?? (Mochly Eldar Architects) ?? THE HELMSLEY Health Discover Tower.
(Mochly Eldar Architects) THE HELMSLEY Health Discover Tower.
 ?? (Miki Koren, Gal Koran) ?? RESEARCH AT Rambam Health Care Campus.
(Miki Koren, Gal Koran) RESEARCH AT Rambam Health Care Campus.
 ?? (Pioter Fliter) ?? PROF. YEHUDA CHOWERS, director of the Division of Research at Rambam Health Care Campus.
(Pioter Fliter) PROF. YEHUDA CHOWERS, director of the Division of Research at Rambam Health Care Campus.

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