BBC Science Focus

Introducin­g your digital twin…

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Imagine a Star Trek-style body scanner that examines your body in such depth that it can produce a 3D computeris­ed model to track your health. Jeff Kaditz didn’t just imagine it, he built one. He’s the CEO of QBio, a US start-up that wants to facilitate a data-led, personalis­ed approach to medicine. The firm’s scanner measures hundreds of biomarkers in a person’s body and tracks them over time in a so-called digital twin – a sort of databank-cum-avatar of your body. Here, he tells us what the physical exam of the future looks like and how it will revolution­ise healthcare.

WHAT IS A DIGITAL TWIN?

It’s a three-dimensiona­l digital model of something. It isn’t new, actually. In manufactur­ing, having a digital twin of, say, an aeroplane engine lets you tweak the design and see how it affects the model. The human body is different. It’s more that we’re tracking what’s changing in a digital twin across all these different biomarkers of your body, and identifyin­g the progressio­n of disease much earlier. So it’s more of a diagnostic.

HOW DOES THE SCANNER WORK?

The core physics that it uses is magnetic resonance, plus a lot of other sensors. The most important thing for us is that we could do these entire full-body scans in 15 minutes or less.

HOW HAS THE PANDEMIC AFFECTED YOUR WORK?

The coronaviru­s has actually helped to tell our story. The way we envision the future of healthcare is similar to the way we’ve done triage for COVID. You have these low-cost, drivethrou­gh sites where you don’t really need highly skilled labour to operate them. In 20 minutes, I get my nose swabbed, I go home and I get a text message if I have to go in.

We think the same thing should be done for the entire body. Imagine you have low-cost sites where, in 20 minutes, everything can be measured about your body, once a year. And if there’s an issue, you get a notificati­on on your phone.

WHAT DOES THE SCANNER MEASURE?

The scanner looks at structural change, so it’s really measuring things on the size of a thousandth of a metre and then looking for changes there. We can measure properties and structures in your body and correlate that with genetic risks and chemical risks taken from more traditiona­l tests.

HOW MANY BIOMARKERS DOES THE TEST MEASURE?

It’s going to be in the many hundreds. The amount of fat in your liver, the amount of visceral fat in your body, fat infiltrati­on of muscles as you get older. There are certain volumes of the structures inside your brain that we know are related to dementia or degenerati­ve diseases. The list goes on and on. And the rate at which these things change can tell you a lot.

WHAT’S THE ADVANTAGE OF SEEING CHANGES IN THE BODY OVER TIME?

Right now the way diagnostic­s are done is based on single variables measured at a single point in time. And they don’t work. The analogy I like to use is [the app] Shazam: you play a song and it

identifies it SuicMly. +f you played a single note and sent it to Shazam that wouldn’t work because lots of songs have the same note. You need to see

the seSuence of notes to see what maMes the song uniSue.

WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES BEYOND DIAGNOSTIC­S?

One big beef that I have with the healthcare system is that we tend to store the output of our analysis, such as a doctor’s diagnosis, but not the data that went into the decision. So we can’t learn from mistakes. To me, the real value for this platform is in triage.

SO WORKING OUT WHO ACTUALLY NEEDS HEALTHCARE?

Yeah. A doctor’s time is really the most precious resource we have in healthcare because the population is growing faster than we create doctors. Doctors are getting burned out. What we need is the ability, without any skilled labour, to stratify risk in a population. The opportunit­y here is if we can gather enough informatio­n, we can say, “Here are the 200 patients you need to see as soon as possible. The rest of them you probably don’t need to see this year.” Right now, healthcare is first-come, first-served, which is really bad.

HOW MUCH DID YOUR OWN EXPERIENCE WITH THE HEALTHCARE SYSTEM HELP YOU TO SHAPE THIS PLATFORM?

I had a situation where I was 27, an active

triathlete, and I was told I was fine. Then three

months later I was told if I don’t get a hip replacemen­t in the next week then they may have

to amputate my leg. But the specific experience

was less important than the generalisa­tion: we all know people who have had terrible experience­s with the healthcare system. Someone has these weird symptoms and they don’t know what’s wrong. They get bounced around specialist­s and every time they see a new doctor, they measure the same things they’ve already measured. By the time they figure out what’s actually wrong, it’s a year later and it’s now not treatable.

ARE YOU CONCERNED THAT AS WE GET MORE AND MORE DATA ABOUT OUR BODIES IT WILL LEAD TO GREATER HEALTH ANXIETY FOR SOME PEOPLE?

I think that has to be a considerat­ion. But on the other hand, not looking at the data is almost as valuable as capturing and looking at it. I eat healthily and exercise, but I’m not a health nut or

biohacker. I want to live my life. I’m fine having all the data recorded and stored somewhere, because it’s an insurance policy. I’m preparing for the time when doctors need this informatio­n to

figure out what’s wrong as quickly as possible.

DO YOU HAVE A ROAD MAP FOR HOW THIS TECHNOLOGY CHANGES THE WORLD?

We have more than a 10-year road map in terms of

where this can go, but I won’t be satisfied until

we’ve effectivel­y replicated med bay in Star Trek

where I can walk into a room, talk to a virtual personalit­y, they can tell me if there are any

problems and potentiall­y fix them on the spot.

 ??  ?? This is an illustrati­on of the idea, nothing to do with the actual device, as the company are keeping their final design a bit of a secret
This is an illustrati­on of the idea, nothing to do with the actual device, as the company are keeping their final design a bit of a secret
 ??  ?? CEO of QBio Jeff Kaditz
CEO of QBio Jeff Kaditz
 ??  ?? The QBio scanner would take measuremen­ts of your body every year, and then flag up any changes that could be a cause for concern
The QBio scanner would take measuremen­ts of your body every year, and then flag up any changes that could be a cause for concern
 ??  ??

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