Episodes

  • Using Spatial Biology to Get Critical Data : 34
    May 2 2024

    Pictorlabs is a California-based startup developing a cloud-based platform that uses artificial intelligence to improve tissue sample analysis through virtual histological staining.

    In Episode #34 of the Speed to Data Podcast, Key Tech’s Andy Rogers speaks with Pictorlabs Chief Product Officer Raymond Kozikowski about his company’s all-digital approach to tissue sample testing.


    Need to know

    · Histopathology — The visual analysis of stained tissue samples to diagnose cancer and other conditions.

    · Tests have long turnaround times — Selection, preparation, and imaging can take as long as a day to return one test’s results to the physician.

    · Tests are requested sequentially — The results of one test determine the next test in the decision tree, so physicians can’t order all the tests simultaneously.

    · Cancer patients must wait — On average, there is a forty-day gap between biopsy and first treatment.


    The nitty-gritty

    As Dr. Kozikowski explains, “Histopathology has traditionally been a chemistry-based testing paradigm. Every cancer case starts with a biopsy, and those tissues are transformed into data that inform the diagnosis and therapeutic options.”

    Pictorlabs’ solution uses one tissue sample to create a virtual stain that simultaneously generates results for dozens of tests within minutes.

    “What we’re doing is teaching AI algorithms the relationship between validated test results and the underlying signature from that unstained piece of tissue,” Dr. Kozikowski said. “From a single patient sample, you’re no longer limited to running one chemical-based test. You can run ten, twenty, thirty AI-based tests.”

    Although the company thought it faced a long march toward the clinical market, Pictorlabs found an opportunity in a different market.

    “There’s a really robust cancer research market, both the academic medical centers and the pharma companies. Where we really got traction wasn’t necessarily as a replacement [technology] but a complement to other kinds of tests.”

    Dr. Kozikowski cites spatial biology as an example. Cells express their genes and RNA differently depending on their location in tissue. Understanding this spatial relationship could yield new, more targeted therapies.

    “A challenge with interrogating RNA targets,” Dr. Kozikowski explains, “is that you often can’t also run traditional staining-based tests. With virtual staining, we’re actually able to complement those RNA-based tests with a pseudo-staining result. This is perfectly fit for purpose in those workflows.”


    Data that made the difference:

    The importance of data to AI development isn’t surprising, but Pictorlabs needs more than quantity.

    “There’s also a lot of nuance in the design of that dataset and making sure it’s fit for purpose,” Dr. Kozikowski says. “Has it seen the diversity of human disease in that training dataset to really make sure that it generalizes accurately and robustly?”

    Partnerships with the research community have helped refine Pictorlab’s technology. One of these relationships is with Dr. Michael Kallen, a pathologist at the University of Maryland’s School of Medicine.

    “Diagnosing lymphoma or leukemia can be very, very complex. You have the challenge of managing a complex workflow in the lab and the complexity of making sense of all those test results spread over weeks or maybe even a month.”

    “[Dr. Kallen] saw the opportunity. We’ve been partnered with that department for a while now, exchanging data to help train algorithms and get feedback from pathologists. We’ve just received an innovation grant to deploy our technology side-by-side with their existing workflows to look at the value.”

    Watch the full video below to learn more about Pictorlabs’ virtual staining solution and to hear Dr. Kozikowski’s advice to product managers and entrepreneurs.

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    36 mins
  • Design as a Platform for Future Assay Tests : 33
    Mar 27 2024

    Astek Diagnostics is a Baltimore-based MedTech startup developing a platform for diagnosing urinary tract infections (UTIs) with unprecedented speed and accuracy.

    In Episode #33, Key Tech’s Andy Rogers and Lauren Eskew discuss this exciting development with Astek Diagnostics co-founder and CEO Dr. Mustafa Al-Adhami.


    Need to know

    • UTIs are proliferating — Within thirty years, global cases rose 90% to over 400 million cases[CC1] , with over 8 million hospital visits in the US alone.
    • Rapid tests are unreliable — Low-specificity dipsticks have high false-positive rates.
    • Clinical tests are slow — Labs take up to three days to return results.
    • Incorrect prescriptions are common — Physicians initially choose the wrong antibiotics in half of patients, delaying effective treatment.
    • UTI complications are lethal — 25% of sepsis cases start as UTIs, leading to 68,000 deaths in the US[CC2] .
    • Slow, inaccurate diagnoses breed resistant bacteria — Delaying the use of effective antibiotics contributes to the severe threat of antimicrobial resistance.

    The nitty-gritty

    Dr. Al-Adhami’s entrepreneurial journey began with a personal crisis two months before receiving his biomedical engineering Ph.D. when his grandfather developed a UTI.

    “It took the doctors four days to tell him what antibiotic he should be using,” Dr. Al-Adhami said. “In the meantime, he was in pain. He was delirious. He fell and broke his hip. I kid you not, he was a young 87-year-old. Within one week, he was a much, much older, bedridden 87-year-old. [While] helping with his care, I was like, if we were able to give him the proper antibiotic right away, we would not be here!”

    Such strong motivation led to a one-hour test for use in a urology or OB/GYN clinic. The system has two components: a single-use sample cartridge and a durable microfluidics fluorescent analyzer that characterizes antibiotic susceptibility[CC3] . Astek’s tabletop prototype already achieves 97% specificity and 94% sensitivity — results that would revolutionize UTI treatment worldwide.

    Data that made the difference

    Working with Key Tech, Dr. Al-Adhami’s team will soon have an alpha product ready to begin feasibility studies. Shortly afterward, the beta design will enter clinical trials with a planned FDA submission by the second quarter of 2025 — a remarkable four years after the company’s founding.

    “The patients are waiting, right?” Dr. Al-Adhami pointed out. “Luckily, my grandfather is still with us. The goal here is to help with my grandfather's situation, so I need to get this to market as soon as possible.

    While Dr. Al-Adhami and co-founder Kevin Tran saw the market need, they needed data from their first prototype to show potential investors. “We ran fifteen samples, and the device was spot on with thirteen of the fifteen. It was like, this works! This is not a bad idea! I was confident enough to raise a pre-seed round. To say, ‘Hey, angel investor, can I have 50K?’”

    Further market research helped shape pricing and reimbursement models that benefit the company and physicians.

    “More importantly,” Dr. Al-Adhami said, “the patient is getting better. That makes it sustainable. The idea here is to shorten the [hospital stay]. We did a health economics study. If we shorten the stay [for all patients] by one day, we’re saving the hospital — per site — a million dollars a day.”

    Watch the full video below for more details and to hear Dr. Al-Adhami’s advice for MedTech founders.


    [CC1]From Key Tech/Astek press release


    [CC2]From Astek’s website


    [CC3]From Key Tech/Astek press release

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    36 mins
  • Where to Focus De-Risking : 32
    Feb 5 2024

    Blackbird Labs is a life sciences accelerator with a mission to develop Baltimore’s biotech startup ecosystem. Funded by the owners of the Baltimore Ravens, Blackbird’s focus is on bridging the gap between research labs and clinical trials.

    In Episode #32, Andy Rogers of Key Tech talks with Blackbird Labs CEO Matt Tremblay about Blackbird’s integrated initiative to foster life science and biotech research in Baltimore.

    Need to know

    Building Baltimore’s biotech infrastructure — The Baltimore area is home to some of the nation’s top biotech research institutions with lots of mid-career talent, but a relatively underdeveloped investor ecosystem compared to Silicon Valley.

    Building a thriving ecosystem — With a mission to foster entrepreneurship and reduce Baltimore’s opportunity gap, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti’s family foundation wants to develop the region’s biotech innovation.

    Blackbird Labs gets innovations out of the lab — A $100 million founding grant will let Blackbird Labs accelerate life sciences innovation by helping promising research cross the gap separating the lab from the market.

    Blackbird Bioventures moves startups towards the market — Making seed-stage investments and cultivating a network of investors, advisors, and leaders will help biotech startups shift from research to clinical trials.


    The nitty-gritty

    Blackbird Labs and Blackbird Bioventures address a significant hurdle preventing novel therapies and technologies from reaching the market. A laboratory discovery is too risky for investors. There are too many open questions concerning safety and efficacy.

    “When a new therapeutic is identified,” Tremblay explains, “we can’t just immediately go into a clinical study.”

    Blackbird Labs attacks the problem from one end by funding research at universities and contract labs that no longer fits within the academic systems of publications and grant-making.

    “What you may need is another one to two years of very focused research to create the data that will then draw in investors that can support the development of this technology all the way to market.”

    That is when Blackbird Bioventures enters the picture. Startups need capital to prepare for and enter clinical trials, which Blackbird’s early seed investments and investor networks help provide. Since its launch last November, Tremblay’s organization has already awarded grants to six research teams and invested in four existing startups.

    Data that made the difference:

    “An important element of our business model is syndicating with other investors but also strategic partners like Big Pharma,” Tremblay says. “We have a few different layers of challenges to overcome. We’re not just looking at… commercial potential, but we also have to look at the feasibility on a one to three-year timescale.”

    The goal is to generate what Tremblay calls “prudent principal data” to excite potential investors. This data must meet two criteria. First, is there a strong mechanistic underpinning for therapy’s efficacy? Second, can the project generate clinical data on a meaningful timescale to show that the therapeutic works?

    Blackbird’s data and investments, Trembly explains, “is a signal to the market that this is an important technology. The goal is then to bring investors from within the Baltimore ecosystem — but importantly from outside of the mid-Atlantic —folks that are investing in very high-quality companies in Boston and San Francisco to look at what we’re building here.”

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    39 mins
  • Take a Holistic View to Define Your Cell & Gene Therapy Product : 31
    Jan 15 2024

    MicrofluidX is an early-stage developer of cell and gene therapy manufacturing platforms that aims to streamline the transition from laboratory research to large-scale GMP manufacturing.

    In Episode #31 of the Speed to Data podcast, Key Tech hosts Andy Rogers and Director of Strategy Lei Zong speak with Dr. Lindsey Clarke, MicrofluidX Vice President of Commercial, about the company’s solution to advanced therapy commercialization.

    Need to know

    Cell and gene therapies are revolutionizing medicine — Since the 1990s, these therapies have opened new avenues for curing once-terminal conditions like cancers and heart disease.

    However, the field is far from industrialized — Skilled operators produce these living medicines in small batches using systems sourced from a complex supplier ecosystem.

    Scalable manufacturing is part of the solution — MicrofuidX is developing a scalable bioreactor that speeds time to insight and accelerates commercialization.

    The nitty-gritty

    Cell and gene therapies allow the patient’s body to cure itself with a single dose. “When I first started in this industry,” Dr. Clarke explains, “we didn’t know if these therapies were going to work, then they started working, and then literally in the last five years, we started saying ‘curing.’ To have seen that in my career is incredible for me.”

    Researchers are now developing therapies for chronic conditions like epilepsy, rheumatic diseases, and diabetes.

    “I think that’s hugely exciting if, from a technology perspective, slightly concerning that there’s really big numbers of patients at the end of these. Do we have the tools that will enable us to get to that scale?”

    R&D pipelines translate manual laboratory processes into automated, scalable commercial production. A challenge for chemistry is more complex for cell and gene therapies that depend upon living cells where, as Dr. Clarke points out, small changes can have big impacts.

    She contrasts feeding cells in production, where automated incubators maintain perfect conditions, to a lab where a human operator moves a flask to a hood, removes the cap, adds media through a pipette, replaces the cap, and returns the flask. These steps introduce stresses and temperature variations that won’t exist in manufacturing.

    “We don’t measure it,” Dr. Clarke says, “We don’t know what impact it really has, but it could be having an impact. So you’re having to go through an optimization phase that is involving large scale technology.”

    Data that made the difference:

    MicrofluidX balances complexity with simplicity. The company’s core technology is a bioreactor with automation, control, and sensor layers that let this single platform scale from milliliters in the lab to liters in production. Dr. Clarke explains, “It means that you can really start to optimize processes in small volume, understand it, and then drive it to where you need it for manufacturing.”

    Listen to the market early. Letting potential customers shape the development path can optimize your product-market fit. “If you’ve already got something that’s ready for the market, it’s too late,” Dr. Clarke says. Qualitative discussions identify issues when you have time to change.

    Make engineers talk with people. Asking engineers, whether they want to or not, to join these customer conversations is “really good for them,” Dr. Clarke says. Engineers ask different kinds of questions that directly impact development.


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    46 mins
  • Creating an Inclusive Culture : 30
    Jan 8 2024

    Diversity and inclusion (D&I) are essential to sustainable business cultures, nowhere more so than in the MedTech industry, where a product’s success can depend on its acceptance within a variety of communities.

    In Episode #30, KeyTech’s Andy Rogers and Senior Mechanical Engineer Danica Mackesey sat down with Sarah Hassaine, ResMed’s Head of Global Inclusion and Diversity, about fostering environments where multiple voices get heard.


    Need to know

    Changing lives globally —ResMed is a global manufacturer of CPAP systems for at-home sleep apnea treatment and ventilator solutions for out-of-hospital care settings.

    Diversity as a strategy — Hassaine’s team coordinates ResMed’s efforts to bring diversity and inclusivity to the employee experience, business practices, and product development.

    Giving ResMed communities a voice — ResMed employees participate in Employee Resource Groups where women, veterans, neurodiverse, and other communities contribute their perspectives to the company’s D&I strategies.

    The nitty-gritty

    A large part of Hassaine’s role is fostering D&I within ResMed — quite a challenge, considering the company has over ten thousand team members supporting customers in over 140 countries! At the same time, the core challenges will be familiar to small companies and startups.

    “The first part is for people to understand themselves,” she explains. “People have their own intrinsic opinions, thoughts, biases…. Building in that ability to understand and find value in people’s differences is the hardest part.”

    Diversity and inclusivity also need to be part of the product development cycle. “Some communities are not comfortable talking about sleep,” Hassaine says. “It is a very personal experience. We have seen that struggle with getting some communities to even get sleep-tested.”

    People from disparate communities — Women, people of color, veterans, older people — have differing attitudes towards doctors, the healthcare system, and personal health in general. These differences, however, are not well understood.

    “Our medical affairs team is doing more research on the social determinants of health and access to health care. We're making sure that everyone gets access to a sleep test if needed.”

    Data that made the difference

    ResMed’s D&I team collects qualitative and quantitative data to understand the state of diversity and inclusion within the company. In addition to surfacing perspectives through Employee Resource Groups, her team generates quantitative insights from hiring, promotion, and attrition data as well as from employee surveys.

    “It does take time, especially in the inclusion space, to address data and see improvement,” Hassaine says. “I’m finally now having a story to tell three years later.”

    Hassaine and Danica addressed how diversity data plays is crucial in medical device development. Danica brought up the “importance of understanding who’s going to use the device because there’s some really potentially dangerous impacts.”

    “We're really taking that into consideration,” Hassaine agreed. The success of sleep apnea treatments often depends on the fit of a CPAC system’s mask. A key question Hassaine brought to ResMed’s product teams: “Are we making sure we have enough diversity to test our products so that we're… accommodating all face types or all heights or all body types?”


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    37 mins
  • Exploring New Applications in Collaboration with BARDA : 29
    Dec 15 2023

    Rivanna Medical is a Virginia-based developer of ultrasound imaging technologies. Accuro, the company’s first product, is a “stud finder for the spine” for more accurate needle placement during spinal and epidural procedures.

    In Episode #29, Andy Rogers of Key Tech talks with Rivanna’s Chairman, CEO, and Co-founder, Will Mauldin, Ph.D., about the role of data in his company’s AI-powered product.

    Need to know

    • Three million vaginal and caesarian births in the United States require anesthesia injected into the epidural space around the spinal cord.
    • Twenty million patients receive epidurals during surgery or as part of a treatment program for chronic pain.
    • However, there are complications. For example, post-dural-puncture headaches occur when a needle punctures the dura and fluid leaks from the spinal canal.
    • First-attempt success rates are around forty percent in challenging populations, such as obese patients or those with spinal abnormalities.
    • Success rates with Rivanna’s Accuro ultrasound imager approach seventy-five percent.

    The nitty-gritty

    Although physicians have used general-purpose ultrasound imagers to scout needle placement, most anesthesia providers don’t have the skills to make it common practice. By focusing on one indication, distinguishing epidural tissue from bone, Rivanna designed a simple handheld device that uses AI-powered software to streamline needle placement.

    Accuro’s small size and integrated screen make identifying and marking the needle insertion site easier. In addition, the device’s transducers interact with bony tissue better than general-purpose devices designed to image soft tissue.

    A focused value proposition also lets Rivanna use neural network algorithms to automate the identification of bone and epidural tissue and guide needle placement more accurately.

    Data that made the difference:

    Conversations with obstetrics anesthesia providers let Mauldin identify the value proposition. “It became pretty clear from those qualitative market research interviews,” Mauldin says, “that the problem is just where do I place the needle to begin with and on what trajectory?”

    Rivanna launched Accuro in 2015, but medical societies like the American Society of Anesthesiologists need more data to recommend ultrasound image-guided epidural procedures. Mauldin explains that Accuro’s next iteration requires identifying “what kind of endpoints would move society guidelines to point to an image-guided standard of care? What clinical evidence do we need to support in order to allow the societies to make that determination?”

    A new product line required gathering even more data. Today, seven percent of emergency department (ED) patients have suspected wrist or ankle fractures. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) is concerned that terrorist attacks could overwhelm EDs with hundreds of fracture patients. Rivanna received BARDA funding to design a portable ultrasound bone tissue imager.

    “We made it through the base segment,” Mauldin explains. “That was about gathering data. We interacted with 180 different emergency physicians, emergency department directors, orthopedists, and radiologists to answer the question: is there a market here for the indication of bone fracture bedside assessment? Fortunately, the answer was yes.”


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    49 mins
  • Lessons Learned in Innovation & Launching Products : 28
    Nov 28 2023

    Uterine cancer rates in the United States are rising. Yet uterine exams rely on expensive, difficult, and painful procedures developed decades ago. North Carolina-based Luminelle has developed an office-based alternative that could revolutionize women’s health.

    In Episode 28 of the MedTech Speed to Data podcast, Andy Rogers of Key Tech talks with Allison London Brown, Luminelle’s Chief Executive Officer, about her company’s innovation journey.

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    32 mins
  • Don't Obsess About the Solution, Obsess About the Problem : 27
    Sep 25 2023

    Sometimes, it takes direct experience to understand the value of innovation. Born out of personal crisis, Luminoah is developing a solution to enteral nutrition, or tube feeding, that will dramatically improve patient quality of life.

    In Episode #27 of the MedTech Speed to Data podcast, Key Tech’s Andy Rogers talks with Luminoah CEO Neal Piper about bringing much-needed innovation to in-home care.


    Need to know

    Tube feeding is extremely common — Every year, half a million new patients, from infants to geriatric patients, can’t swallow solids or liquids and require an alternate means of nutrient supply.

    Enteral nutrition lets patients live at home — A patient with long-term needs has a gastric feeding tube inserted through their abdomen into their stomach so they can leave the hospital.

    Yet the current standard of care is bulky — Patients must manage an IV pole, peristaltic pump, replaceable nutrient bags, and two meters of tubing.

    Slow pumps limit freedom further — Patients become defined by their illness, unable to go to work or school.

    Current products do not track data — Because tracking nutrient consumption is difficult, many patients are readmitted to the hospital for malnutrition.


    The nitty-gritty

    Neal’s decision to enter the enteral nutrition sector was not the result of market analysis or laboratory research. “It came out of a personal need for my wife and I when my son, Noah, turned three years old. He started choking on his saliva and food.”

    Doctors at the UVA Children’s Hospital discovered a tumor in the base of Noah’s skull that prevented him from eating or drinking. Noah rang the bell and ended his therapy after 18 months of chemotherapy.

    “Fortunately for us, we had a really positive outcome,” Neal said, but the experience opened his eyes to the challenges kids and adults face in similar situations.

    “Everyone says, don’t obsess about the solution, obsess about the problem, and that’s what we did.”

    After interviewing GI surgeons, nutritionists, distributors of feeding solutions, and many patients, Neal confirmed that Noah’s experience was not unique. “The major challenge that patients are dealing with is a lack of portability, an unintuitive approach, and not being able to track and be empowered with data.”


    Data that made the difference:

    Understanding the problem can justify a research program, but it does not explain how Luminoah could raise $1 million seed and $6 million Series A rounds in a tough investment climate.

    Noah explained how his team pressure-tested what he calls the 5 P’s of business development:

    Product Validation: Can you design a manufacturable product that solves the problem?

    Plan: What’s your go-to-market strategy? What does the financial model look like?

    Patent strategy: Can you protect the technology?

    People: Can you find experienced people to drive the project forward?

    Pathway: Can you get from development through 510(k) approval?

    “Three and a half years in, we’re about a month away from design three,” Noah explained. “We’ve got a working device we’re submitting to the FDA for 510(k) approval with clearance anticipated in 2024.”

    Learn how the Charlottesville, Virginia, biotech ecosystem and a community of enteral feeding patients supported Luminoah’s journey in the full video here:

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    38 mins