The Scotsman

Innovation set to improve patient care

- By SCOTT REID scott.reid@jpimedia.co.uk

Heriot-watt University has claimed a manufactur­ing breakthrou­gh that will allow fibre-optic medical devices to be made in a fraction of the time previously needed.

Such devices are used for the diagnosis and treatment of many diseases including cancer detection and laser surgery. However, up to now, they have been expensive to make, limiting the adoption of new breakthrou­gh devices by hospitals and clinics.

The new manufactur­ing technique developed by Edinburgh’s Heriot-watt is said to offer lower costs and is highly repeatable, which could accelerate the adoption of new devices to improve patient care.

The team has also developed new micro-optic systems for applicatio­ns in minimally invasive precision microsurge­ry using ultrafast laser pulses delivered by specialist fibres developed by the University of Bath.

The results were unveiled as part of a wider report into a five-year £1.3 million grant, funded by the Engineerin­g and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

Professor Robert Thomson from Heriot-watt University led the project team that has developed the new manufactur­ing technique.

He said: “Medical device technologi­es are vital for the

detection and treatment of a huge number of diseases and healthcare challenges.

“Increasing­ly, micro-devices are being developed for minimally invasive measuremen­t and therapy, for example in cancer detection and precision laser surgery. However, up to now, they have been very expensive to produce.

“Coming up with a medical device innovation is exciting but if it can’t be made commercial­ly, it won’t be used in hospitals and clinics. To encourage

take-up of state-of-the-art devices, it is vital to provide low-cost and highly repeatable manufactur­ing solutions.

“We’ve achieved a major manufactur­ing advance using laser beam shaping techniques. This gives us control of the shape of the focal volume, and therefore more efficient use of the available laser pulse energy during manufactur­e.”

Professor Duncan Hand was principal investigat­or across the 4MD Platform grant which delivered this and 18 other

individual projects, supported by a range of medical and industrial partners.

Projects included a new technique to sterilise ambulances using ultraviole­t light, an ultrasound needle to better position epidurals during labour and a proof-of-concept study using lasers to overcome existing limitation­s of convention­al neurosurge­ry for cleaning brain cancer margins.

Hand said: “Our overarchin­g objective was to use the flexibilit­y of the Platform grant

to develop and exploit manufactur­ing technologi­es to provide medical device manufactur­e that is both practical and commercial­ly viable, leading to new and improved healthcare solutions.

“The4mdplat­formgranth­as led to £11.3m of follow-on funding for translatio­nal research and the developmen­t of medical devices, including the creationof­themedical­devicemanu­facturing Centre.”

 ?? ?? 0 The manufactur­ing technique developed by Heriot-watt is said to offer lower costs and is highly repeatable
0 The manufactur­ing technique developed by Heriot-watt is said to offer lower costs and is highly repeatable

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