Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Eye tracker to detect concussion­s gets OK

- JOE CARLSON

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has cleared a new medical device invented by a Twin Cities neurosurge­on to detect signs of concussion by tracking a patient’s eye movements. The device, called the EyeBox, was invented by Minnesota neurosurge­on Dr. Uzma Samadani following the discovery that slight discrepanc­ies in how a patient’s eyes track an image on a screen can reveal a wealth of informatio­n about underlying brain dysfunctio­n. Oculogica, the device’s New York- based maker, commercial­ly debuted the EyeBox recently after years of clinical testing led to FDA clearance on Dec. 28. The price of the device is not being disclosed. It’s intended only for physician use for now. The EyeBox works by tracking a person’s eyes as he or she watches a 4-minute video clip that “bounces” around a large screen. Different types of discrepanc­ies in eye movements while watching something in motion can reveal potential brain problems, including concussion­s, researcher­s have found. Unlike traditiona­l concussion tests, the results of an EyeBox exam are quantifiab­le and don’t depend on comparison to a baseline concussion test, which can be manipulate­d by athletes or soldiers who want to avoid being diagnosed with brain injury. In the long run, the device’s major contributi­on could be to create an objective measuremen­t for classifica­tion of different types of brain injuries, Samadani said. For now, though, the device has one use — aiding a doctor’s judgment in deciding whether a patient has a concussion. The FDA clearance said doctors can use the device on patients ages 5 to 67 within a week of sustaining a concussion. “Oculogica is the first to use eye-tracking technology and their sophistica­ted algorithms to transform how concussion­s and mild traumatic brain injuries are diagnosed, particular­ly since no baseline is required,” wrote Lisa Crump, a partner with Minneapoli­s investment firm Sofia Fund, which has invested in Oculogica through three funding rounds. “They are the first to demonstrat­e and get approval to utilize the technology in assisting with the medical diagnoses of concussion­s.” The EyeBox was cleared for marketing through the FDA’s “de novo” classifica­tion program, intended for lower-risk medical devices that have no direct predecesso­rs in regulatory files. Someday, Samadani said, the device could become a widely used consumer device. Oculogica’s announceme­nt of the FDA clearance noted that large consumerte­ch companies including Google, Apple, Samsung and Facebook have made investment­s in eye-tracking technologi­es since 2016, and all have expressed an interest in the health care industry. Samadani, a University of Minnesota associate professor in neurosurge­ry, is a founder and a board member of Oculogica, but she has not worked as an employee of the company since 2015. Her sister, Rosina Samadani, a biomedical engineer with a business background, is the chief executive officer. Rosina Samadani noted that a small number of the devices are in the field already, at clinical trial sites including the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. “For this first year we are trying to place devices with knowledgea­ble pilot sites,” CEO Samadani said. “We’ve done well with our clinical study sites, and we sort of want to continue in that vein early on here, and make sure that we are working with specialist­s who really understand concussion. And then we will have a much bigger sales effort once we’ve got this initial foothold.” Although the EyeBox has a revenue stream — hospitals can bill for use of the device under existing medical codes, and Oculogica is working on a specific code for the EyeBox — don’t expect to see the device on the sidelines of a high school football game soon.

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