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MIDDLE EAST HEALTH is the leading independent English language medical trade magazine in the Middle East and Levant region. It has been serving the healthcare industry for more than 45 years. Read More
Home Explore Middle East Health Magazine - January/February 2023
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P:01

March-April 2017

www.MiddleEastHealth.com

Bahrain US$8, Egypt US$8, Iran US$8, Iraq US$8, Jordan US$8, Kuwait US$8, Lebanon US$8, Oman US$8, Qatar US$8, Saudi Arabia US$8, Syria US$8, UAE US$8, Yemen US$8

Serving the region for over 40 years January - February 2023

In the News

• Scientists uncover novel biomarker to detect Alzheimer’s in blood

• New surprisingly potent receptor ‘decoy’ drug deactivates Covid-19 virus and variants

• MBRU research team awarded grant to investigate subtypes of type 2 diabetes

• WHO and partners launch One Health Joint Plan of Action

Cardiology

Researchers discover new

immune target to treat CVD

Digital marker first to map CVD

characteristics on a spectrum

ARAB HEALTH 2023

Preview

Innovation

New cellular ‘glue’ developed

to regenerate tissues,

heal wounds, regrow nerves

Radiology

Scientists integrate

dark-field X-ray with CT

P:05

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 3

Serving the region for 40 years January - February 2023

Advancing healthcare

Callan Emery

Editor

[email protected]

Prognosis

Publisher

Michael Hurst

[email protected]

Editor

Callan Emery

[email protected]

Editorial Consultants

Dr Gamal Hammad, Dr Peter Moore, Harry Brewer

Middle East Editorial Office

PO Box 72280, Dubai, UAE

Telephone: (+9714) 391 4775

[email protected]

Marketing Manager

Foehn Sarkar

Telephone: (+9714) 391 4775 n Fax: (+9714) 391 4888

[email protected]

Subscription & Admin Manager

Savita Kapoor

Telephone: (+9714) 391 4775 n Fax: (+9714) 391 4888

[email protected]

Advertising Sales

PO Box 72280, Dubai, UAE

[email protected]

Americas, France

Joy Sarkar

P O Box 72280, Building No.2

2nd Floor, Dubai Media City

Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Tel: +971 4 391 4775 Fax: +971 4 391 4888

[email protected]

Japan

Mr Katsuhiro Ishii

Ace Media Service Inc

12-6, 4-chome, Adachi-ku, Tokyo 121-0824, Japan

Tel: +81-3-5691-3335 n Fax:+81-3-5691-3336

Email: [email protected]

China

Miss Li Ying

Medic Time Development Ltd,

Flat 1907, Tower A, Haisong Building, Tairan 9th Road,

Futian District, Shenzhen, China 518048

Tel: +86-755-239 812 21 n Fax: +86-755-239 812 33

Email: [email protected]

Taiwan

Larry Wang

Olympia Global Co Ltd

7F, No.35, Sec 3, Shenyang Rd, Taichung

Taiwan 40651 n P O Box: 46-283 Taichung Taiwan 40799

Tel: +886- (4)-22429845 n Fax:+886- (4)-23587689

Email: [email protected]

Middle East Health is published by Hurst Advertising FZ LLC,

Dubai Media City, License Number: 30309

UAE National Media Council - Approval Number: 2294781.

Middle East Health online

www.MiddleEastHealth.com

Middle East Health is printed by Atlas Printing Press.

www.atlasgroupme.com

Middle East Health is an official media partner to the Arab Health trade

show taking place at the Dubai World Trade Centre from 30 January

to 2 February 2023. This year’s show looks set to be a big one as Covid

restrictions are no longer in place. The organisers say they are expecting

more than 3000 exhibitors from more than 70 countries. MedLab,

which is now a separate event to be held from 6-9 February, sold out all

their available exhibition space two months ahead of the show – this,

even though the organisers expanded the available space. We trust they

will be productive events for everybody.

In this issue we look at two recent studies in cardiology. The first looks

at a protein called soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor, or

suPAR, which is shown to be a cause of atherosclerosis and could be a

potential target for future treatment for cardiovascular disease. In the

second study, researchers show how they have used machine learning to

develop a digital marker for coronary artery disease that is the first such

marker to map the characteristics of CAD on a spectrum.

We also look at several recent groundbreaking studies in our Laboratory

News section. One, in particular, has important implications for

Alzheimer’s disease and looks at the development of a novel biomarker

that can detect the disease in blood. Currently, diagnosing Alzheimer’s

disease requires neuroimaging.

In local news, researchers at Mohammed Bin Rashid University of

Medicine and Health Sciences in Dubai have recently been awarded

significant funding to investigate the subtypes of type 2 diabetes, which

has an exceptionally high prevalence in the UAE. The aim is that this

will help enable scientists to develop precision medicine for the disease.

Remember to keep an eye on our website – www.MiddleEastHealth.com

– where we regularly post interesting new developments in research as

well as healthcare news from the region.

We wish all our readers and advertisers a healthy, happy and

prosperous 2023.

P:06

4 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

contents

NEWS

6 Middle East Monitor

12 Worldwide Monitor

16 The Laboratory

Serving the region for 40 years January - February 2023

FOCUS

EXPERT VIEW

EXPOS & CONFERENCES

FINAL PAGES

www.MiddleEastHealth.com

22 Cardiology: Physician-scientists discover new immune

target to treat cardiovascular disease

24 Cardiology: New digital marker for coronary artery disease

is first to map characteristics of CAD on a spectrum

28 Cardiology: Gene therapy corrects mutation responsible

for dilated cardiomyopathy

44 Radiology: Researchers integrate dark field X-ray with

conventional CT technology

46 Radiology: PET technology more effective than

angiogram at determining need for coronary stents,

bypass surgery

48 Radiology: More frequent CT scans not associated with

improved outcomes after lung cancer surgery

52 Demand for mental health services grow across the Middle East

56 MedTech trends for 2023

82 Working to a healthier future

58 Arab Health preview

86 On the Pulse

94 Innovation in Healthcare

96 The Back Page

08

44

88

17

28

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6 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

During the recent Healthcare Protective

Shield Wargaming Conference, the Department of Health – Abu Dhabi (DoH),

used simulated cyber incident response

scenarios to help prepare healthcare facilities in Abu Dhabi for cyber threats by

evaluating the effectiveness of their incident response and communication plans.

Hosted in Abu Dhabi as the first-ofits-kind in the region, the conference was

organised in collaboration with the Cyber

Security Council with the participation

of ten of the biggest healthcare groups of

Abu Dhabi, representing more than 370

entities. The Cyber wargaming conference

focused on assessing the sector’s preparedness to handle cyber challenges and pinpoint recommendations and best practices,

with the aim of ensuring the readiness of

the sector and continuity of care.

The event saw DoH showcasing its efforts

in the digitisation of healthcare services and

emphasised the importance of strong data

security to protect patient data and sensitive

information. Additionally, it covered a simulation of the Department’s Medical Operations Command’s (MOC) “Information SharGuy’s and St Thomas’ Private Healthcare

ing” and “Patient

Transfer Module”

in the Estijabah

Platform. The

module is used

to facilitate patient evacuation

from one healthcare facility to

another in order

to ensure an uninterrupted continuity of care

delivery to patients.

Dr Jamal Mohammed Al Kaabi, UnderSecretary of the Department of Health

– Abu Dhabi (DoH), said: “Under the

directives of our wise leadership, we are

continuously working on developing the

healthcare ecosystem in the emirate for it

to become one of the most innovative systems in the world through digital services.

Accordingly, we understand that advances

in technology entail that we provide the

highest levels of protection to patients’ privacy. This event creates an opportunity to

explore and discuss all possible solutions to

combat cyber incidents in accordance with

international standards and best practices.”

middle east monitor

Update from around the region

Department of Health –

Abu Dhabi boosts sector’s

preparedness for cyber attack

Dubai-based Emirates International

Accreditation Centre (EIAC) has received endorsement from the International Society for Quality in Health

Care External Evaluation Association

(ISQua EEA) for its Accreditation

Standard for Healthcare Providers.

The recognition was given after the

External Evaluation Award Committee (EEAC) of ISQua EEA conducted

a comprehensive independent assessment of the EIAC Accreditation Standard for Healthcare Providers.

EIAC is the world’s first organisation to

be accredited by the ISQua for a healthcare accreditation standard covering hospitals, clinics, day surgery centres, fertility centres, home health services, medical

tourism, and tele-health services.

The achievement further reinforces Dubai’s

status as a regional and global hub for healthcare and medical tourism and paves the way

for the development of a unified set of healthcare service standards in the UAE.

EIAC fulfilled 98.4 percent of criteria

in the evaluation conducted by the ISQua

EIAC receives international recognition for its healthcare accreditation standard

EEA. The evaluators noted EIAC’s extensive coverage of healthcare sectors and

institutions and the diversity of EIAC`s

quality parameters that cover not only patient rights but also health escorts, visitors,

and healthcare personnel.

Amina Ahmed Mohammed, Executive

Director of EIAC, said: “EIAC seeks to

contribute to the leadership’s vision to ensure the UAE and Dubai’s healthcare sector maintains the world’s highest standards.

By monitoring compliance with legislation, decisions and regulations, conducting

Mohammed Hamad Al-Kuwaiti, Head

of Cyber Security for the Government of

the UAE, noted that the Cyber Security

Council is building a safe and resilient infrastructure for cybersecurity in the UAE.

In addition, it is promoting a culture of

cybersecurity among institutions and individuals. He explained that the Cyber Security Council embodies the forward-looking

vision of the UAE leadership and the country’s proactive approach in dealing with the

various challenges posed by the fast-paced

development of digital technologies.

Globally, the healthcare sector is a frequent target for cyber-attacks due to the

sensitivity and value of patient information,

which is sold and used in identity theft.

P:09

site visits to audit and evaluate services, as

well as setting the right specifications, we

work to ensure healthcare services meet

the highest international standards. EIAC

also seeks to lead the development of these

standards to further enhance the UAE and

Dubai’s global pre-eminence in the field of

quality management and enable the public to obtain the best possible services in a

wide range of healthcare fields.”

The ISQua EEA recognition enables

EIAC to further raise the global profile of

its healthcare accreditation services. Currently, over 1,000 conformity assessment

bodies in more than 40 countries use EIAC’s accreditation services.

This international recognition is the

culmination of the extensive efforts of EIAC’s officials in cooperation with a group

of diverse Emirati medical professionals

and experts from various local and international healthcare organisations.

In addition to the latest endorsement

from ISQuaEEA, EIAC is recognised internationally by the International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (ILAC)

to provide accreditation for different types

of laboratories and inspection bodies.

The Jameel Clinic, the centre of artificial

intelligence (AI) in healthcare at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),

co-founded by MIT and Community Jameel in 2018, in partnership with Wellcome, has launched the Jameel Clinic AI

Hospital Network, a new initiative which

aims to roll out clinical AI tools at 35 hospitals across eight countries, including Mexico, India and Taiwan. The network is supported by the Jameel Clinic and Wellcome.

In countries with low-resourced health

systems, hospitals and public health agencies are increasingly strained by emerging health challenges, including climate

change, sedentary lifestyles, as well as a

number of issues due to increased life expectancy, resulting in a rise in non-communicable, neurodegenerative, and infectious diseases. The past decade has seen

significant breakthroughs in clinical AI

technologies in all areas of clinical care,

including risk assessment and diagnostics,

treatment personalisation, and the prediction of outcomes. If adopted into everyday

clinical practice, these technologies have

great potential to save lives, improve quality of care, and control costs for clinical

care institutions.

Central to the missions of both the

Jameel Clinic and Wellcome is a commitment to ensuring new healthcare

technologies are developed and deployed

equitably, including in low- and middleincome countries. The broad deployment

and testing of AI technologies through the

Jameel Clinic AI Hospital Network will

offer hospitals free-of-charge access to a

repository of cutting-edge AI tools as they

mature sufficiently to become integrated

into the clinical pipeline.

The tools deployed will cover a range

of clinical applications, allowing hospitals

to select the ones relevant to their needs.

The network seeks to develop procedures

for the safe and effective deployment of AI

tools in specific clinical contexts, test AI

tools to ensure equitable health outcomes,

and refine tool development to optimise

their clinical utility.

In addition to the AI tools, which will

span multiple therapeutic areas, the network will also offer backline support to

the hospitals’ IT networks and access to

support, resources, and partners through

the Jameel Clinic. The Jameel Clinic will

further facilitate all stages of deployment,

from IT support to educating physicians

about clinical AI. This process will allow

the Jameel Clinic to collect critical feedback on adoption, ease of use, and usefulness of these algorithms in real-world contexts. The hospitals’ clinicians will utilise

the AI tools in compliance with patientrelated regulations and provide feedback

on the application of the AI tools and

their utilisation in real-life clinical settings, including statistics on usability, error

rate, and user comments.

Commenting on the newly launched

network, Professor Regina Barzilay, AI faculty lead at the MIT Jameel Clinic, said:

“With machine learning, we have the capacity to bring about truly transformative

change in healthcare and that can only

happen if we effectively deploy machine

learning models in real-world settings,

into hospitals and medical centres with

clinicians and patients. Building a robust

coalition of researchers, clinicians, hospitals, and public health actors is critical

to realizing the benefits of major advances

in machine learning in the detection and

treatment of diseases.”

Tariq Khokhar, head of data for science and health at Wellcome, said: “In

recent years, there’s been a proliferation

of AI tools in health – a trend that only

increased during the pandemic. But many

of them have not been rigorously tested in

diverse clinical settings with patients from

different backgrounds. This will be crucial

to making sure tools are effective and contribute to better health outcomes. We’re

delighted to support the Jameel Clinic AI

Hospital Network, to develop methods to

roll out clinical AI tools in safe and effective ways, ultimately improving people’s

health and saving lives.”

Jameel Clinic at MIT and Wellcome launch Jameel Clinic AI Hospital Network

Amina Ahmed Mohammed,

Executive Director of EIAC

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 7

P:10

8 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

A team of researchers at Mohammed

Bin Rashid University of Medicine and

Health Sciences (MBRU) and clinicians

from Dubai Diabetes Center, Dubai Hospital, and Kings College Hospital Dubai

have received almost AED 1 million

(US$272,000) from Sandooq Al Watan,

as a research grant to pursue precision

medicine research for type 2 diabetes.

Over the next three years, Dr Riad

Bayoumi, Professor of Basic Sciences at

MBRU, and his team of five researchers at

MBRU will work alongside the clinicians

to investigate and classify subtypes of type

2 diabetes. They hypothesize that if distinct subtypes of type 2 diabetes are identified, then clinicians can identify characteristics of the disease leading to treatment

strategies that are specific to an individual

patient.

Funding by Sandooq Al Watan, a private UAE philanthropic organization with

a significant endowment to invest and

support innovative researchers and organizations, will allow the team to research,

develop, and deploy precision medicine for

type 2 diabetes patients in the UAE. The

aim of precision medicine is to customize

the diagnosis, treatment, and aftercare of

an individual rather than deploying a one‐

drug‐fits‐all model. In similar studies, precision medicine has resulted in significant

improvements to the diagnosis and management of cancer patients.

“In the Middle East, 11% of adults suffer

from type 2 diabetes. in the UAE, almost

one in every five adults is affected,” commented Prof. Bayoumi. Over the past few

years, the SALAMA Hospital Information

System of the Dubai Academic Health

Corporation has registered data from

30,000 type 2 diabetic patients, Emiratis

and expatriates, in the UAE. Using this

database, researchers have applied an artificial intelligence system to identify patterns in certain pathophysiological traits

to create subtypes of the disease. The study

will attempt to identify these subtypes of

Type 2 diabetes using data-driven methods

and machine-learning algorithms in a cohort of patients with extensive clinical and

genomic variables.

“This will bring us closer to precision

medicine in diabetes, where a patient will

receive the right treatment that fits his

condition,” added Prof Bayoumi.

Yasser Al Garagawi, Director General

of Sandooq Al Watan, noted that “the

decision of the Board of Directors of Sandooq Al Watan chaired by His Excellency

Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan

to provide this grant to MBRU stems from

Sandooq Al Watan’s appreciation for the

great efforts undertaken by the University

in the field of applied scientific research,

which strengthens the UAE’s position in

this field.”

“Sandooq Al Watan is keen to support the

UAE’s researchers in all fields to enhance

creativity and innovation. We wish the researchers the best in taking this potentially

life-changing research forward,” he said.

MBRU research team

awarded grant to

investigate subtypes of

type 2 diabetes

MBRU research team

Dr Riad Bayoumi, Professor of

Basic Sciences at MBRU

Mubadala Health has launched a pilot programme that supports parents across the

emirate of Abu Dhabi, in collaboration

with Abu Dhabi Early Childhood Authority (ECA), furthering its commitment to

safeguard and support the physical and

mental well-being of parents and children.

This pilot programme focuses on ‘Community Awareness and Child Development

Knowledge’ and is a key component of the

Abu Dhabi Integrated Early Childhood

Intervention System Framework.

The pilot programme aims to address the

needs and rights of all children in the emirate of Abu Dhabi, regardless of income level, geographical location, or gender; along

with boosting positive outcomes for children by educating parents on important developmental milestones and how they can

support their children in achieving the best

developmental outcomes during these milestones. The programme will leverage the

national vaccination schedule to increase

awareness and understanding about any

Mubadala Health and Abu Dhabi Early Childhood Authority establish

pilot programme to support parents and children

t

P:11

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 9

P:12

10 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

developmental delays and the importance

of early intervention, along with tracking

developmental progress for the appropriate age range and encouraging parents with

concerns about their child’s development to

seek guidance as early as possible.

The second phase of the programme will

see the launch of a ‘Child Healthline’ that

will be operated by Abu Dhabi Telemedicine Centre, a Mubadala Health Partner.

This helpline will provide immediate support to parents or caregivers who have concerns about their child’s development, by

providing them with the required healthcare services. Parents will also be provided

with the resources essential to foster their

child’s development and enhance awareness of their child’s changing developmental needs. These services range from tips on

how to play with children to guidance on

when and how to introduce solid foods to

infants. The dedicated children’s support

helpline will be resourced by trained and

qualified nurses who will provide support

and guidance to parents and assist in scheduling appointments if there are any concerns or problems that need to be resolved

quickly with medical interventions.

H.E. Sana Mohamed Suhail, Director-General of Abu Dhabi Early Childhood Authority (ECA), said: “Together with our partners

at Mubadala Health, we aim to raise parents’

awareness about the child’s key developmental milestones and the importance of early

intervention, as well as enabling them to detect any developmental disorders or delays,

and encouraging them to talk about their

concerns with healthcare professionals early

on; in order to ensure that the child receives

accurate and early diagnosis and access to appropriate intervention services.”

Suhail stressed that the lack of awareness

and understanding among parents regarding

their children’s development journey and

how to identify potential difficulties can be

a barrier to children’s timely access to early

intervention services. This programme will

contribute to improving the parents’ confidence and knowledge of the signs of proper

development of their children, and enable

them to access experts and formal sources

of information related to child growth and

development, in order to support the proper and healthy development of all children

during early childhood.

Commenting on the partnership, Hasan

Jasem Al Nowais, Chief Executive Officer of Mubadala Health, said: “Mubadala

Health is taking another significant step in

support of families across Abu Dhabi, by

launching pilot programmes that explore

ways to safeguard and support the emotional, psychological and physical wellbeing of parents and children. This is just

one of the many initiatives we are working

on in collaboration with Abu Dhabi Early

Childhood Authority to secure a bright

future for parents and children in the

emirate, by leveraging the expertise and

capabilities of our world-class network of

healthcare assets.”

The outcomes of the pilot programme

will bolster research and provide contemporary evidence on how to best support

parents as they navigate parenthood.

Agung Pandit Wiguna/Pexels

The UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and

International Cooperation (MoFAIC) has

signed a Memorandum of Understanding

(MoU) with International SOS to foster

cooperation and partnership in the field

of providing healthcare services to UAE

nationals abroad, in order to achieve MoFAIC’s strategic objectives to deliver proactive services for nationals abroad.

The MoU was signed on 28 December by Faisal Issa Lutfi, Assistant

Undersecretary for Consular Affairs,

representing MoFAIC, and Katherine

Brett, General Manager representing

International SOS, in presence of several

officials from both parties.

The MoU includes the provision of

medical advice, the implementation of

medical evacuations, and support in the

treatment of critical medical cases of nationals. This will contribute to expediting

the procedures for the transfer of patients

to the UAE to be completed within only 6

hours from the hospitalisation of national

patients abroad.

To ensure cooperation and strengthen

the partnerships with institutions in the

framework serving the nationals’ interest,

MoFAIC collaborated with health facilities in the UAE to provide healthcare

services for nationals who have been

medically evacuated.

MoFAIC worked with the Ministry

of Health and Prevention to activate

a unified mechanism to handle emergency medical cases of UAE nationals

abroad through coordination with the

UAE representative missions abroad.

• MoFAIC has launched an emergency line to respond to emergency reports

of UAE nationals abroad, by contacting

the following number: 0097180024.

UAE ministry signs MoU with International SOS to facilitate medical evacuations of nationals

P:13

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 11

Sharjah Ruler directs

establishment of

mental health facility

Sheikh Dr Sultan bin

Mohammed Al Qasimi, Ruler

of Sharjah and Member

of the UAE Supreme

Council, on 21 December

directed the establishment

of a facility dedicated to

the treatment of mental

illnesses. His Highness said

that the facility should

perform semi-custodial

work for mental patients.

He said it should provide

psychological and physical

monitoring of patients as

one of the centre’s primary

responsibilities.

Zimmer Biomet, a global medical technology company, has opened a new innovation

hub at Dubai Science Park to showcase its

advanced technologies, surgical robotics

and implants to healthcare customers.

“Our customers can now get close to our

solutions and better understand how Zimmer Biomet’s technology and data can improve healthcare efficiency and patient outcomes,” said Wilfred van Zuilen, President,

Zimmer Biomet EMEA.

In January 2022, Zimmer Biomet opened

a new office in Dubai to serve increasing demand from hospitals and clinics in the Middle

East, North Africa and Turkey (MENAT).

“Zimmer Biomet’s Dubai Innovation

Hub is the next step in our investment in

the region, and it demonstrates our commitment to helping customers maintain

momentum during a transformative period

in healthcare,” said Erik Antos, Vice President, Zimmer Biomet Emerging Markets.

“At the Dubai Innovation Hub, customers will learn more about the increasing

expectations of patients for personal and

connected digital experiences, and how

we deliver data-driven insights that help

increase efficiency, alleviate pain for patients, and improve the quality of life for

people around the world,” said Antos.

A central part of the company’s offering, ZBEdge, combines multiple Zimmer

Biomet technologies, implants and services to offer a unique medtech platform

in orthopaedics.

Farah Hamdan, General Manager, Zimmer Biomet MENAT, said: “ZBEdge, Zimmer Biomet’s suite of integrated digital

technologies, robotics, implants and consultancy services now have the power to

work together, gathering and sharing data

across the whole patient pathway.”

In the pursuit for optimized care, surgeons

and care teams can make decisions for individual patients with data-derived clinical insights and precise technologies, in the operating room and at every other phase of care.

ZBEdge can help to improve efficiency by

connecting technologies, streamlining communication and automating workflows. Care

teams benefit from real-time understanding of

their hospital’s performance and are in a better position to realize opportunities to unlock

efficiencies and optimize outcomes.

Zimmer Biomet opens innovation hub at Dubai Science Park

P:14

worldwide monitor

Update from around the globe

12 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

2022 was a busy and productive year for

WHO’s One Health Initiative. Key to its

efforts was the launch of the One Health

Joint Plan of Action with the other Quadripartite members, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

(FAO), the United Nations Environment

Programme (UNEP), and the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH).

The plan integrates systems and capacity to collectively better prevent, predict,

detect, and respond to health threats. Ultimately, this coordination should improve

the health of humans, animals, plants, and

the environment, while contributing to

sustainable development.

The plan was launched on 18 October

2022, during a joint event at the World

One Health Joint Plan of Action launched

Health Summit in Berlin, hosted by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and

Development (BMZ), the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit

(GIZ), the Museum für Naturkunde and the

Foundation Healthy Planet-Healthy People.

It was then presented at the biennial

World One Health Congress, held in

Singapore in November. The focus of

that conference was on how One Health

could support the Covid-19 recovery by

integrating science, policy, and clinical practice. The pandemic has spurred

many governments to look for guidance,

and the One Health Joint Plan of Action

is providing them with a framework in

which to move forward.

Breaking the silos that exist between

sectors and disciplines will require innovative approaches and strengthening of

social, administrative, scientific, economic

and political will. Greater investment in

applied and multidisciplinary implementation research, including in social behaviour change across the spectrum from

building new knowledge to piloting and

scaling is needed to enable sustainable,

locally relevant scientific and evidencebased interventions that channel scientific

inquiry toward positive change.

The Quadripartite is currently developing an implementation framework to operationalize the One Health Joint Plan of

Action at all levels and to support countries to establish or further strengthen

their One Health systems and capacities. t

P:15

Member States of the World Health Organization on 8 December 2022 agreed to

develop the first draft of a legally binding

agreement designed to protect the world

from future pandemics. This “zero draft” of

the pandemic accord, rooted in the WHO

Constitution, will be discussed by Member

States in February 2023.

WHO Member States agree to develop zero draft of legally binding pandemic accord

One Health is an integrated, unifying approach to balance and optimize the health

of people, animals and ecosystems. It uses

the close, interdependent links among

these fields to create new surveillance and

disease control methods.

For example, the way land is used

can impact the number of malaria

cases. Weather patterns and humanbuilt water controls can affect diseases

like dengue. Trade in live, wild animals

can increase the likelihood of infectious diseases jumping over to people

– called disease spillover.

The COVID-19 pandemic put a spotlight on the need for a global framework

for improved surveillance and a more

holistic, integrated system. Gaps in One

Health knowledge, prevention and integrated approaches were seen as key

drivers of the pandemic. By addressing

the linkages between human, animal

and environmental health, One Health

is seen as a transformative approach to

improved global health.

Key facts

• The health of humans, animals,

and ecosystems are closely interlinked.

Changes in these relationships can increase the risk of new human and animal diseases developing and spreading.

• The close links between human,

animal and environmental health demand close collaboration, communication and coordination between the

relevant sectors.

• One Health is an approach to optimize the health of humans, animals and

ecosystems by integrating these fields,

rather than keeping them separate.

• Some 60% of emerging infectious

diseases that are reported globally come

from animals, both wild and domestic.

Over 30 new human pathogens have been

detected in the last 3 decades, 75% of

which have originated in animals.

• Human activities and stressed ecosystems have created new opportunities

for diseases to emerge and spread.

• These stressors include animal trade,

agriculture, livestock farming, urbanization,

extractive industries, climate change, habitat fragmentation and encroachment into

wild areas.

To implement One Health, major structural changes are required to integrate the

human, animal and environmental health

fields and support multi-sectoral communication, collaboration, coordination, and

capacity strengthening.

We now have an unprecedented opportunity to strengthen collaboration

and policies across these many areas

and reduce the risk of future pandemics and epidemics while also addressing

the ongoing burden of endemic and

non-communicable diseases

Surveillance that monitors risks and

helps identify patterns across these

many areas is needed. In addition, new

research should integrate the impact of

these different fields, particularly on the

drivers that lead to crises.

WHO is integrating One Health

across its units and offices, providing

strategic advice relating to policy, and

conducting training at the local, national and regional levels. The goal is

stronger programmes that are led and

owned by countries.

One Health Joint Plan of

Action https://bit.ly/3Z38fhw

One Health overview

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 13

The agreement by the Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB), comprised of

WHO’s 194 Member States, was a milestone in the global process to learn from the

COVID-19 pandemic and prevent a repeat

of the devastating impacts it has had on

individuals and communities worldwide.

The INB gathered at WHO headquarters

in Geneva from 5-7 December for its third

meeting since its establishment in December 2021, following a special session of the

World Health Assembly.

The Body agreed that the INB’s Bureau

will develop the zero draft of the pandemic

accord in order to start negotiations at the

fourth INB meeting, scheduled to start

on 27 February 2023. This draft will be

based on the conceptual zero draft and the

discussions during this week’s INB meeting. The INB Bureau is comprised of six

delegates, one from each of the six WHO

regions, including the co-chairs Roland

Driece of the Netherlands and Precious

Matsoso of South Africa.

“Countries have delivered a clear message that the world must be better prepared, coordinated and supported to protect all people, everywhere, from a repeat

of Covid-19,” said Driece. “The decision

to task us with the duty to develop a zero

draft of a pandemic accord represents a

major milestone on the path towards making the world safer.”

Matsoso said government representatives stressed that any future pandemic

accord would need to take into account

equity, strengthen preparedness, ensure

solidarity, promote a whole-of-society and

whole-of-government approach, and respect the sovereignty of countries.

“The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on human lives, economies and societies at large must never be forgotten,” said

Matsoso. “The best chance we have, today,

as a global community, to prevent a repeat

of the past is to come together, in the spirit

of solidarity, in a commitment to equity,

and in the pursuit of health for all, and

develop a global accord that safeguards societies from future pandemic threats.”

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14 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

New data released 8 December 2022 by the

World Health Organization (WHO) show

that countries around the world largely

held the line against further setbacks to

malaria prevention, testing and treatment

services in 2021.

According to the 2022 World malaria report <https://bit.ly/3GEpjmW>,, there were

an estimated 619,000 malaria deaths globally in 2021 compared to 625,000 in the

first year of the pandemic. In 2019, before

the pandemic struck, the number of deaths

stood at 568,000.

Malaria cases continued to rise between

2020 and 2021, but at a slower rate than

in the period 2019 to 2020. The global

tally of malaria cases reached 247 million

in 2021, compared to 245 million in 2020

and 232 million in 2019.

“Following a marked increase in malaria cases and deaths in the first year of

the Covid -19 pandemic, malaria-affected countries redoubled their efforts and

were able to mitigate the worst impacts

of Covid-related disruptions to malaria

services,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “We

face many challenges, but there are many

reasons for hope. By strengthening the response, understanding and mitigating the

risks, building resilience and accelerating

research, there is every reason to dream of

a malaria-free future.”

Despite successes, there remain many

challenges, particularly in the African region, which shouldered about 95% of cases

and 96% of deaths globally in 2021.

Disruptions during the pandemic and

converging humanitarian crises, health

system challenges, restricted funding, rising biological threats and a decline in the

effectiveness of core disease-cutting tools

threaten the global response to malaria.

“Despite progress, the African region

continues to be hardest hit by this deadly

disease,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO

Regional Director for Africa. “New tools

– and the funding to deploy these – are urgently needed to help us defeat malaria.”

At the same time, a decline in the effectiveness of core malaria control tools, most crucially Insecticide Treated Bednets, is impeding further progress against malaria. Other

risks are also rising, including parasite

mutations affecting the performance of

rapid diagnostic tests; growing parasite resistance to the drugs used to treat malaria;

and the invasion in Africa of an urbanadapted mosquito that is resistant to many

of the insecticides used today.

WHO recently launched a new global

framework < https://bit.ly/3Ijgpwd > to respond

to malaria in urban areas.

Despite continued impact of Covid-19, malaria cases and deaths remained stable in 2021

Marking this year’s International Day of

Persons with Disabilities (or People of

Determination) on 3 December, António

Guterres, the UN Secretary-General, called

for transformative, innovative solutions, in

a world confronted by crises which disproportionally affects people with disabilities.

In his message, Guterres noted that greater

public-private sector collaboration is needed

in order to develop strategies that benefit people of determination, noting that they should

also be involved in their development.

The UN chief pointed to the UN’s internal efforts to make the Organisation more

accessible to people of determination, describing the United Nations Disability Inclusion Strategy <https://www.un.org/en/content/

disabilitystrategy> as a road map to achieving

this aim.

“From headquarters to the field,” he

said, “we are working to assess, address and

promote digital accessibility and lead by

example on disability inclusion.”

Powerful tools for inclusion

Innovation and technology, he continued,

can be powerful tools for inclusion, enhancing

access to information, education, and lifelong

learning, opening new avenues for people of

determination to participate in the workforce

and society at large on an equal basis.

The United Nations estimates that 15

percent of all people – one in seven – has

a disability. Understanding is key to ensuring that the more than one billion people

with disabilities lead fulfilling lives where

they are fully integrated into a society that

respects their rights and benefits from their

contributions.

A newly released UN documentary illustrates this vision of integration, through the

eyes of two South Korean artists with disabilities, and reveals a new perspective on the true

meaning of inclusion, in today’s diverse world.

Breaking Barriers

“Breaking Barriers One Brushstroke at a

Time” <https://youtu.be/C3QfDr1VH6A>

takes viewers inside the homes and lives

of the artists, who communicate through

their paintings and, in the process, teach

audiences to listen with their eyes.

Far more than an exercise in social development, the works of these artists with

autism carry intrinsic artistic value, and

have been exhibited at the Seoul Arts

Centre, the largest and most prestigious

venue of its kind in the country.

Through interviews with the families

and intimate glimpses of the lives and

loves of two artists, Hansol Kim and Hyeshin Park, the documentary tells a specific story of struggle that also has universal themes: finding our voice in a world

that doesn’t listen, expressing truths that

rise above the noise, and coming of age by

accepting who we are and what we have

to contribute to society.

“Breaking Barriers” shows that inspiration is everywhere, disability is a matter

of perspective, and that all of us share a

common humanity that can be captured

and comprehended through art.

António Guterres, UN Secretary-General.

UN Chief says innovation key to fairer world

for people with disabilities

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 15

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16 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Medical research news from around the world

the laboratory

A group of neuroscientists led by a University

of Pittsburgh School of Medicine researcher

developed a test to detect a novel marker of

Alzheimer’s disease neurodegeneration in a

blood sample. A study on their results was

published 27 December 2022 in Brain [1].

The biomarker, called “brain-derived tau,”

or BD-tau, outperforms current blood diagnostic tests used to detect Alzheimer’s-related

neurodegeneration clinically. It is specific to

Alzheimer’s disease and correlates well with

Alzheimer’s neurodegeneration biomarkers in

the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).

“At present, diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease requires neuroimaging,” said senior author Thomas Karikari, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at Pitt. “Those tests are

expensive and take a long time to schedule,

and a lot of patients, even in the U.S., don’t

have access to MRI and PET scanners. Accessibility is a major issue.”

Currently, to diagnose Alzheimer’s disease, clinicians use guidelines set in 2011 by

the U.S. National Institute on Aging and

the Alzheimer’s Association. The guidelines, called the AT(N) Framework, require

detection of three distinct components of

Alzheimer’s pathology – the presence of

amyloid plaques, tau tangles and neurodegeneration in the brain – either by imaging

or by analyzing CSF samples.

Unfortunately, both approaches suffer from

economical and practical limitations, dictating the need for development of convenient

and reliable AT(N) biomarkers in blood

samples, collection of which is minimally

invasive and requires fewer resources. The

development of simple tools detecting signs

of Alzheimer’s in the blood without compromising on quality is an important step toward

improved accessibility, said Karikari.

“The most important utility of blood

biomarkers is to make people’s lives better and to improve clinical confidence and

risk prediction in Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis,” Karikari said.

Current blood diagnostic methods can

accurately detect abnormalities in plasma

amyloid beta and the phosphorylated form

of tau, hitting two of the three necessary

checkmarks to confidently diagnose Alzheimer’s. But the biggest hurdle in applying the AT(N) Framework to blood samples

lies in the difficulty of detecting markers of

neurodegeneration that are specific to the

brain and aren’t influenced by potentially

misleading contaminants produced elsewhere in the body.

For example, blood levels of neurofilament light, a protein marker of nerve cell

damage, become elevated in Alzheimer’s

disease, Parkinson’s and other dementias,

rendering it less useful when trying to differentiate Alzheimer’s disease from other

neurodegenerative conditions. On the

other hand, detecting total tau in the blood

proved to be less informative than monitoring its levels in CSF.

By applying their knowledge of molecular

biology and biochemistry of tau proteins in

different tissues, such as the brain, Karikari

and his team, including scientists at the

University of Gothenburg, Sweden, developed a technique to selectively detect BDtau while avoiding free-floating “big tau”

proteins produced by cells outside the brain.

To do that, they designed a special antibody that selectively binds to BD-tau,

making it easily detectible in the blood.

They validated their assay across over 600

patient samples from five independent cohorts, including those from patients whose

Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis was confirmed

after their deaths, as well as from patients

with memory deficiencies indicative of early-stage Alzheimer’s.

The tests showed that levels of BD-tau

detected in blood samples of Alzheimer’s disease patients using the new assay

matched with levels of tau in the CSF and

reliably distinguished Alzheimer’s from

other neurodegenerative diseases. Levels

of BD-tau also correlated with the severity

of amyloid plaques and tau tangles in the

brain tissue confirmed via brain autopsy

analyses.

Scientists hope that monitoring blood levels of BD-tau could improve clinical trial design and facilitate screening and enrolment

of patients from populations that historically

haven’t been included in research cohorts.

“There is a huge need for diversity in

clinical research, not just by skin colour

but also by socioeconomic background,”

said Karikari. “To develop better drugs, trials need to enrol people from varied backgrounds and not just those who live close

to academic medical centres. A blood test

is cheaper, safer and easier to administer,

and it can improve clinical confidence

in diagnosing Alzheimer’s and selecting

participants for clinical trial and disease

monitoring.”

Karikari and his team are planning to

conduct large-scale clinical validation of

blood BD-tau in a wide range of research

groups, including those that recruit participants from diverse racial and ethnic

backgrounds, from memory clinics, and

from the community. Additionally, these

studies will include older adults with no

biological evidence of Alzheimer’s disease

as well as those at different stages of the

disease. These projects are crucial to ensure that the biomarker results are generalizable to people from all backgrounds,

and will pave the way to making BD-tau

commercially available for widespread

clinical and prognostic use.

Breakthrough: scientists uncover novel

biomarker to detect Alzheimer’s in blood

Thomas Karikari, Ph.D.

Thomas Karikari

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac407

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 17

Researchers at UC San Francisco have engineered molecules that act like “cellular

glue”, allowing them to direct in precise

fashion how cells bond with each other.

The discovery represents a major step toward building tissues and organs, a longsought goal of regenerative medicine.

Adhesive molecules are found naturally

throughout the body, holding its tens of

trillions of cells together in highly organized patterns. They form structures, create

neuronal circuits and guide immune cells to

their targets. Adhesion also facilitates communication between cells to keep the body

functioning as a self-regulating whole.

In a new study [1], published in the 12

December 2022, issue of Nature, researchers engineered cells containing customized adhesion molecules that bound with

specific partner cells in predictable ways to

form complex multicellular ensembles.

“We were able to engineer cells in a manner that allows us to control which cells they

interact with, and also to control the nature of

that interaction,” said senior author Wendell

Lim, PhD, the Byers Distinguished Professor of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology

and director of UCSF’s Cell Design Institute.

“This opens the door to building novel structures like tissues and organs.”

Regenerating connections between cells

Bodily tissues and organs begin to form in

utero and continue developing through

childhood. By adulthood, many of the molecular instructions that guide these generative processes have disappeared, and

some tissues, like nerves, cannot heal from

injury or disease.

Lim hopes to overcome this by engineering adult cells to make new connections. But doing this requires an ability to

precisely engineer how cells interact with

one another.

“The properties of a tissue, like your skin

for example, are determined in large part

by how the different cells are organized

within it,” said Adam Stevens, PhD, the

Hartz Fellow in the Cell Design Institute

and the first author of the paper. “We’re

devising ways to control this organization

of cells, which is central to being able to

synthesize tissues with the properties we

want them to have.”

Much of what makes a given tissue

distinct is how tightly its cells are

bonded together. In a solid organ, like a

lung or a liver, many of the cells will be

bonded quite tightly. But in the immune

system, weaker bonds enable the cells

to flow through blood vessels or crawl

between the tightly bound cells of skin

or organ tissues to reach a pathogen or

a wound.

To direct that quality of cell bonding,

researchers designed their adhesion molecules in two parts. One part of the molecule acts as a receptor on the outside of

the cell and determines which other cells

it will interact with. A second part, inside

the cell, tunes the strength of the bond

that forms. The two parts can be mixed

and matched in a modular fashion, creating an array of customized cells that bond

in different ways across the spectrum of

cell types.

The code underlying cellular assembly

Stevens said these discoveries also have

other applications. For example, researchers could design tissues to model disease

states, to make it easier to study them in

human tissue.

Cell adhesion was a key development

in the evolution of animals and other multicellular organisms, and custom adhesion

molecules may offer a deeper understanding of how the path from single to multicellular organisms began.

“It’s very exciting that we now understand much more about how evolution

may have started building bodies,” he said.

“Our work reveals a flexible molecular adhesion code that determines which cells

will interact, and in what way. Now that

we are starting to understand it, we can

harness this code to direct how cells assemble into tissues and organs. These tools

could be really transformative.”

Researchers develop cellular ‘glue’ to regenerate tissues, heal wounds, regrow nerves

Our work reveals a flexible

molecular adhesion code that

determines which cells will

interact, and in what way. Now

that we are starting to understand

it, we can harness this code to

direct how cells assemble into

tissues and organs. These tools

could be really transformative.

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05622-z

Wendell Lim, PhD, director of UCSF’s Cell Design Institute, holds

a cellular model in his office at UCSF’s Mission Bay Campus.

Photo by Elena Zhukova

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18 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have developed a drug that potently

neutralizes SARS-CoV-2, the Covid-19

coronavirus, and is equally effective

against the Omicron variant and every other tested variant. The drug is

designed in such a way that natural

selection to maintain infectiousness

of the virus should also maintain

the drug’s activity against future

variants.

The investigational drug, described in a report published 7 December 2022 in Science Advances [1], is

not an antibody, but a related molecule

known as an ACE2 receptor decoy. Unlike antibodies, the ACE2 decoy is far

more difficult for the SARS-CoV-2 virus

to evade because mutations in the virus

that would enable it to avoid the drug

would also reduce the virus’s ability to

infect cells. The scientists found a way to

make this type of drug neutralize coronaviruses more potently in animals infected

with Covid-19 and to make it safe to give

to patients.

This report comes at a time when antibody drugs used to treat Covid-19 have

lost their effectiveness because the viral

spike protein has mutated to escape being

targeted by the antibodies.

The researchers, led by first author

James Torchia, MD, PhD, and senior author Gordon Freeman, PhD, identified

features that make ACE2 decoys especially potent and long-lasting. For example, they found that when they included

a piece of the ACE2 protein called the

collectrin-like domain, it made the drug

stick more tightly to the virus and have

a longer life in the body. Their experiments showed that ACE2 decoys have

potent activity against the Covid-19 virus because they trigger an irreversible

change in the structure of the virus – they

“pop” the top off the viral spike protein

so it can’t bind to the cell-surface ACE2

receptor and infect cells.

The SARS-CoV-2 virus is covered with

projections called spike proteins that enable the virus to infect cells. The spike

protein binds to the ACE2 receptor on

the cell surface and then refolds, driving

the spike into the cell, enabling the

virus to enter. ACE2 decoys lure the

virus to bind to the decoy instead of

the cell, “popping” the spike and

inactivating the virus before it

can enter cells. This explains the

drug’s surprising potency: not only

does it function as a competitive

inhibitor, but it permanently inactivates the virus. Since binding to

ACE2 is required for infection, variants can change but they must continue

to bind to ACE2, making the drug persistently active against all variants.

The researchers say that, in addition

to treating antibody-resistant variants of

SARS-CoV-2, the drug described in this

study could be useful to treat new coronaviruses that might emerge in the future

to infect humans. This is because many

coronaviruses in nature poised to enter

the human population also utilize ACE2

to infect cells.

While the drug, called DF-COV-01, has

not yet been tested in humans, manufacturing development is nearly complete

and preclinical studies needed for regulatory approval are underway, with the goal

of advancing the drug to clinical trials.

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abq6527

New surprisingly potent receptor ‘decoy’ drug deactivates Covid-19 virus and variants

Researchers have long been working on

how to treat obesity, a serious condition

that can lead to hypertension, diabetes,

chronic inflammation, and cardiovascular

diseases. Studies have also revealed a strong

correlation of obesity and cancer – recent

data show that smoking, drinking alcohol,

and obesity are the biggest contributors to

cancer worldwide.

The development of fat cells, which are

produced from a tiny fibroblast-like progenitor, not only activates the fat cells’ specific

genes but also grows them by storing more

lipids (adipocytes and adipose tissue). In

fact, lipid storage is the defining function of

a fat cell. But the storage of too much lipid

can make fat cells unhealthy and lead to

obesity.

Challenges in targeting fat cells

The ability to target fat cells and safely

uncouple unhealthy fat formation from

healthy fat metabolism would be the answer

to many peoples’ prayers. A major challenge in obesity treatment is that fat tissue,

which is not continuous in the body but is

found piece by piece in “depots”, has been

difficult to target in a depot-specific manner, pinpointed at the exact location.

There are two main kinds of fat: visceral

fat, internal tissues that surround the stomach, liver, and intestines, and subcutaneous

fat, found under the skin anywhere in the

Researchers discover cationic charged P-G3 reduces fat at targeted locations

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 19

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20 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

body. Visceral fat produces potbellies; subcutaneous fat can create chin jowls, arm fat,

etc. To date, there has been no way to specifically treat visceral adipose tissue. And

current treatments for subcutaneous fat like

liposuction are invasive and destructive.

Two studies show new way to treat obesity

Two new studies from researchers at Columbia Engineering and Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC)

may have the answer to targeting fat cells

depot-specifically and healthily. The papers

demonstrate a new method to treat obesity

by using cationic nanomaterials that can

target specific areas of fat and inhibit the

unhealthy storage of enlarged fat cells. The

materials remodel fat rather than destroying

it, as, for example, liposuction does. The

first paper [1], published 1 December 2022 by

Nature Nanotechnology, focuses on visceral

adiposity, or belly fat. The second paper[2],

published online 28 November 2022 by

Biomaterials, focuses on fat underneath the

skin as well as chronic inflammation associated with obesity.

The team of researchers, led by Li Qiang,

associate professor of pathology and cell biology at CUIMC, and Kam Leong, Samuel

Y. Sheng Professor of Biomedical Engineering and of systems biology at CUIMC, recognized that adipose tissue contains large

amounts of negatively charged extracellular matrix (ECM) to hold fat cells. They

thought that this negatively charged ECM

network might provide a highway system of

sorts for positively charged molecules. So

they took a positively charged nanomaterial, PAMAM generation 3 (P-G3), and injected it into obese mice. The P-G3 quickly

spread throughout the tissue and the team

was excited that their method to specifically target visceral fat worked.

Unexpected results

And then something intriguing happened:

P-G3 shut off the lipid storage programme in

fat cells and the mice lost weight. This was

totally unexpected, given the well-established

function of P-G3 in neutralizing negatively

charged pathogens, such as DNA/RNA cell

debris, to alleviate inflammation.

“Our approach is unique – it departs from

the pharmacological or surgical approaches,”

said Qiang, who specializes in obesity and adipocyte biology. “We used cationic charge to

rejuvenate healthy fat cells, a technique no

one has ever used to treat obesity. I think this

novel strategy will open the door to healthier

and safer reduction of fat.”

PAMAM generation 3

In these two studies, the researchers discovered that the cationic material, P-G3,

could do an intriguing thing to fat cells

– while it helped new fat cell formation,

it also uncoupled lipid storage from the

housekeeping functions of fat cells. And

because it inhibits the unhealthy lipid storage of enlarged fat cells, the mice had more

metabolically healthy, young, small fat cells

like those found in newborns and athletes.

The researchers found that this uncoupling

function of P-G3 also holds true in human fat biopsies, signifying the potential of

translation in humans.

“With P-G3, fat cells can still be fat cells,

but they can’t grow up,” said Leong, a pioneer

in using polycation to scavenge pathogens.

“Our studies highlight an unexpected strategy

to treat visceral adiposity and suggest a new

direction of exploring cationic nanomaterials

for treating metabolic diseases.”

New applications

Now that they can selectively target

visceral fat, Leong and Qiang envision

several applications. The Biomaterials

study demonstrates a simple approach

that could be used for aesthetic purposes;

like Botox, P-G3 can be locally injected

into a specific, subcutaneous fat depot.

The investigators, who have patents

pending, are now engineering P-G3 into

various derivatives to improve the efficacy, safety, and depot specificity. What

the researchers are particularly excited

about is developing P-G3 into a platform

that can deliver drugs and gene therapies

specifically to a given fat depot. This

may repurpose many drugs from systemic

safety concerns, such as Thiazolidinediones (TZDs), a potent but unsafe drug

that is a strong modulator of fat and used

to treat type 2 diabetes – but it has been

linked to heart failure and banned in

several countries.

“We’re very excited to discover that

cationic charge is the secret to targeting

adipose tissue,” Qiang said. “Now we can

shrink fat in a depot-specific manner – anywhere we want – and in a safe way without

destroying fat cells. This is a major advance

in treating obesity.”

References:

1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-022-01249-3

2. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121850

Nicoletta Barolini/Columbia University

Illustration of depot-specific targeting of fat by cationic nanomaterials.

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 21

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22 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

In a study led by Michigan Medicine, scientists have uncovered a protein produced

by the immune system that causes atherosclerosis, which offers the promise of new

treatments for cardiovascular disease.

Traditionally clinicians have treated cardiovascular disease by focusing on blood

pressure control, and reducing cholesterol

by using medications like statins. Despite

these measures, heart disease remains the

number one cause of death in many parts

of the world, with many patients having

heart attacks even after their risk factors

are controlled, said Salim Hayek, M.D.,

physician-scientist and medical director of

the University of Michigan Health Frankel Cardiovascular Clinics.

“Targeting the immune component

central to the development of atherosclerosis is the Holy Grail for the treatment

of heart disease,” Hayek, senior author of

the study, explained. “This is the first time

that a component of the immune system is

identified that meets all the requirements

for being a promising treatment target for

atherosclerosis.”

This protein, called soluble urokinase

plasminogen activator receptor, or suPAR,

is produced by the bone marrow. It acts as

a regulator, essentially a thermostat for the

activity of the immune system, or “immunostat”.

Past studies have shown suPAR to be

a marker of cardiovascular disease. But

Physician-scientists

discover new immune

target to treat

cardiovascular disease

Cardiology

this study, published 4 October 2022 in

the Journal of Clinical Investigation, [1] is

the first evidence showing that the protein actually causes atherosclerosis when

at high levels.

Three-pronged findings

First, the research team analysed the

Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis,

which consists of over 5,000 people without known cardiovascular disease and

found that those who had higher suPAR

levels were much more prone to develop

atherosclerosis and experience cardiovascular events, regardless of their underlying

risk factors.

Then, the investigators did a genetic

study of 24,000 people to find whether

certain genetic variations affected levels of

suPAR in blood. They discovered a specific

variant in the gene PLAUR that codes for

suPAR, and people with that genetic variant tended to have higher suPAR levels.

Most importantly, that genetic variant was

linked to atherosclerosis in a Mendelian

randomization analysis of 500,000 participants in the UK Biobank, which was replicated in two other large data sets.

“We also found that participants lacking

a copy of the PLAUR gene have lower risk

of heart disease,” said first author and geneticist George Hindy, M.D., Ph.D., of Regeneron Genetics Center. “Altogether, the

genetic data is truly compelling for high

suPAR being a cause of atherosclerosis.”

Finally, in mouse models with high suPAR

levels, researchers saw a dramatic increase in

atherosclerotic plaques of mouse aortas compared to mice with normal suPAR levels.

“Even prior to developing atherosclerosis, the mouse aortas with high suPAR

levels contained more inflammatory white

blood cells, and the immune cells circulating in blood were in an activated state, or

‘attack-mode,’” said Daniel Tyrrell, Ph.D.,

co-first author and research fellow at the

U-M Health Frankel Cardiovascular CenSalim Hayek, M.D., physician-scientist and

medical director of the University of Michigan

Health Frankel Cardiovascular Clinics

P:25

ter. “High suPAR levels appear to activate

the immune cells and prime them to overreact to the high cholesterol environment,

causing these cells to enter the blood vessel

wall and accelerate the development of atherosclerosis.”

What is unique about this study, Hayek

says, is that it brings to light high-quality

clinical, genetic and experimental data –

all pointing to suPAR as a cause of atherosclerotic disease.

“Now, we’re looking into developing

treatments to reduce suPAR levels safely

as a strategy to prevent and treat heart disease, especially since traditional therapies

for atherosclerosis have no impact on suPAR,” he said.

suPAR links kidney and

cardiovascular disease

The study dovetails findings that suPAR

is known to be a pathogenic factor that

causes kidney disease. People often experience the two conditions together: twothirds of people with kidney disease are

affected by cardiovascular disease, and

over 40% of patients with cardiovascular

disease have signs of kidney disease.

“This paper places suPAR as the link

between kidney and cardiovascular disease;

a common factor causing both through

this inappropriate, persistent activation

of the immune system,” said co-author

Jochen Reiser, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the

Department of Medicine at Rush University

and an expert in the study of suPAR.

“This is pointed out in the Mendelian

randomization genetic analysis done by the

investigators, showing that high suPAR is

also linked to kidney disease.”

For both conditions, suPAR has long

been known as a biomarker for poor outcomes and disease progression. In a 2020

study, Hayek’s team found that suPAR

can worsen acute kidney injury [2] and

that blocking suPAR prevents it. A recent

study led by Hayek found that levels of

protein are high [3] in patients with heart

failure and predict death for patients.

Research into suPAR’s role in health

and disease has advanced rapidly in the

past 10 years. Hayek says suPAR has great

potential to be a successful treatment

target for cardiovascular and kidney

disease. His lab has already begun work

References:

1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI158788

2. doi: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1911481

3. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cardfail.2022.08.010

designing anti-suPAR therapies and

planning clinical trials.

“My hope is that we are able to provide

these treatments to our patients within

the next three to five years,” he said. “This

will be a game changer for the treatment

of atherosclerotic and kidney disease.”

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 23

Now, we’re looking

into developing

treatments to reduce

suPAR levels safely as

a strategy to prevent

and treat heart

disease, especially

since traditional

therapies for

atherosclerosis have

no impact on suPAR.

Coronary Artery Disease

P:26

24 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Using machine learning and clinical data

from electronic health records, researchers at

the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York constructed an in silico, or

computer-derived, marker for coronary artery

disease (CAD) to better measure clinically

important characterizations of the disease.

New digital marker

for coronary artery disease

is first to map characteristics

of CAD on a spectrum

The findings, published online on 20 December 2022 in The Lancet [1], may lead to

more targeted diagnosis and better disease

management of CAD, the most common type

of heart disease and a leading cause of death

worldwide. The study is the first known research to map characteristics of CAD on a

spectrum. Previous studies have focused only

on whether or not a patient has CAD.

CAD and other common conditions

exist on a spectrum of disease; each individual’s mix of risk factors and disease

processes determines where they fall on

the spectrum. However, most such studIndividuals with coronary artery disease exist on a spectrum of disease, such as the amount of plaque build-up in the arteries of the heart; however, the disease is conventionally classified as broad categories of case (yes disease) or control (no

disease), which may result in misdiagnosis. A digital marker for coronary artery disease derived from machine learning and

electronic health records can better quantify where an individual falls on the disease spectrum.

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Cardiology

P:27

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 25

At Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospitals (RB&HH), London, Mr Toufan Bahrami is at the forefront of pioneering new

totally endoscopic surgery for valve repair

and replacement. The procedure offers an

alternative to sternotomy, and allows for

a quicker patient recovery time with better aesthetic results.

Performed exclusively at RB&HH, the

endoscopic procedure is designed to treat

patients with mitral valve disease but is

also suitable for tricuspid and aortic valve

repair. Taking around four hours and performed under general anaesthetic, a 3cm

incision, without rib spreading, allows

enough room for endoscopic instruments

to rotate 360 degrees providing multiangled and precise views.

RB&HH at the forefront of

revolutionary 3D heart valve

endoscopic surgery

Cutting-edge 3D technology

A high-definition 3D camera is used to direct the procedure inside the heart and the

surgeon can then repair or replace the damaged valve. During the procedure, surgeons

wear 3D glasses and are guided by images

projected onto a 4k screen, which allows

other surgeons in the room to see the same

images. The projected images can also be

accessed remotely, allowing our specialists

to collaborate from anywhere in the world.

Mr Bahrami, consultant cardiac surgeon

at Royal Brompton Hospital, explains:

“This pioneering technology has revolutionised the way we work, as we’ve never

had such a view of the operating field. We

can now access views from deep inside the

chest, through high-quality 4K images – and

one big advantage of this, is that we can use

the 3D projections to teach our trainees.”

Gold-standard approach and results

Totally endoscopic surgery has similar results

to a sternotomy procedure but allows for a

much smaller incision with less bleeding,

greater precision, less pain, and less chance of

infection, resulting in a quicker recovery.

Due to its minimally invasive nature, patients are usually discharged after three days.

Within four weeks patients have reported

being active again with minimal scarring

and fewer complications when compared to

a standard procedure. “Without minimally

invasive and totally endoscopic options, we

would not be able to provide these gold-standard results,” comments Mr Bahrami.

• To find out more visit: www.rbhh-specialistcare.co.uk/totallyendoscopic

Royal Brompton & Harefield Hospitals

P:28

26 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(22)02079-7

ies break this disease spectrum into rigid

classes of case (patient has disease) or control (patient does not have disease). This

may result in missed diagnoses, inappropriate management, and poorer clinical outcomes, say the investigators.

“The information gained from this noninvasive staging of disease could empower

clinicians by more accurately assessing

patient status and, therefore, inform the

development of more targeted treatment

plans,”said Ron Do, PhD, senior study

author and the Charles Bronfman Professor in Personalized Medicine at the Icahn

School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

“Our model delineates coronary artery disease patient populations on a disease spectrum; this could provide more insights into

disease progression and how those affected

will respond to treatment. Having the ability to reveal distinct gradations of disease risk,

atherosclerosis, and survival, for example,

which may otherwise be missed with a conventional binary framework, is critical.”

Machine learning model

In the retrospective study, the researchers trained the machine learning model,

named in silico score for coronary artery

disease or ISCAD, to accurately measure

CAD on a spectrum using more than

80,000 electronic health records from

two large health system-based biobanks,

the BioMe Biobank at the Mount Sinai

Health System and the UK Biobank.

The model, which the researchers

termed a “digital marker”, incorporated

hundreds of different clinical features from

the electronic health record, including

vital signs, laboratory test results, medications, symptoms, and diagnoses, and compared it to both an existing clinical score

for CAD, which uses only a small number

of predetermined features, and a genetic

score for CAD.

The 95,935 participants included participants of African, Hispanic/Latino,

Asian, and European ethnicities, as well as

a large share of women. Most clinical and

machine learning studies on CAD have focused on white European ethnicity.

The investigators found that the probabilities from the model accurately tracked

Detection of left atrial mechanical

dysfunction by measurement of

left atrial reservoir strain improves

stroke prediction in persons without

a history of atrial fibrillation or stroke

A cohort study of more than 4,500 persons without a history of atrial fibrillation

(AF) or stroke has found that measuring left atrial mechanical function can

improve stroke prediction. The findings were published on 20 December 2022

in Annals of Internal Medicine.

AF is a serious public health problem because of its increasing prevalence in the aging

population and its association with risks of cardiac thromboembolism and stroke. An

intrinsically pro-thrombotic atrial myopathy, characterized by changes in left atrial mechanical function and size, may precede and promote development of AF. Evaluating left

atrial mechanics and size may have utility in enhancing prediction of cardiac embolism

and stroke earlier in a patient’s disease course before development of AF.

Researchers from multiple institutions including the Pennsylvania State University, University of California Los Angeles, and the University of Minnesota

evaluated data from 4,917 persons participating in the ARIC (Atherosclerosis

Risk in Communities) study. The authors found that left atrial mechanical dysfunction, detected by analysis of left atrial strain, was associated with ischemic

stroke independently of left atrial size and risk factors from the CHA2DS2-

VASc score. They also found that the addition of left atrial reservoir strain

to the CHA2DS2-VASc variables improved stroke prediction and yielded a

greater predicted net benefit, as shown by decision curve analysis. According to

the authors, the results of this study support the hypothesis that atrial myopathy,

characterized by left atrial mechanical dysfunction, is intrinsically prothrombotic, resulting in higher risk for cardiac embolism and ischemic stroke.

Reference: doi: https://doi.org/10.7326/M22-1638

the degree of narrowing of coronary arteries (coronary stenosis), mortality, and

complications such as heart attack.

“Machine learning models like this

could also benefit the healthcare industry

at large by designing clinical trials based

on appropriate patient stratification. It

may also lead to more efficient data-driven individualized therapeutic strategies,”

said lead author Iain S. Forrest, PhD, a

postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Dr Do

and an MD/PhD student in the Medical Scientist Training Program at Icahn

Mount Sinai. “Despite this progress, it

is important to remember that physician

and procedure-based diagnosis and management of coronary artery disease are

not replaced by artificial intelligence, but

rather potentially supported by ISCAD as

another powerful tool in the clinician’s

toolbox.”

Next, the investigators envision conducting a prospective large-scale study to

further validate the clinical utility and actionability of ISCAD, including in other

populations. They also plan to assess a more

portable version of the model that can be

used universally across health systems.

Cardiology

P:29

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 27

P:30

28 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Cardiology

Gene therapy corrects mutation

responsible for dilated cardiomyopathy

destroying its ability to contract and causing it to become extremely enlarged and

fail over time. Treatment is limited to drugs,

which can improve contractile function but

don’t provide a permanent fix, or a heart

transplant, which frequently isn’t an option

due to a shortage of donor organs.

Seeking to attack the root cause of this

disease, Drs. Olson, Bassel-Duby, Nishiyama, and their colleagues looked to

CRISPR-Cas9, a popular tool for genetic

research recognized with the Nobel Prize

in Chemistry in 2020. Using this system,

researchers can potentially correct diseasecausing mutations in important genes.

Thus far, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a single clinical trial

that uses this technology to try to treat

sickle cell disease. However, Dr. Olson

said CRISPR-Cas9 has huge potential to

treat an untold number of other genetic

diseases. Dr. Olson and colleagues have

used CRISPR gene editing to develop a

technique to halt progression of Duchenne

muscular dystrophy in animal models.

To determine the feasibility of this approach for DCM, the research team used

a virus to deliver CRISPR-Cas9 components to cardiac muscle cells derived

from human cells carrying two different

types of DCM-causing mutations. ScienDrs Rhonda Bassel-Duby, Takahiko Nishiyama and Eric Olson (l-r) published a study on their use of the

CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing system to correct mutations responsible for dilated cardiomyopathy.

These representative hearts from 12-week-old mice show a

normal heart (left) and an enlarged heart that’s characteristic

of dilated cardiomyopathy.

Using the CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing system,

UT Southwestern researchers corrected mutations responsible for a common inherited

heart condition called dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in human cells and a mouse model of the disease. Their findings, published 23

November 2022 in Science Translational Medicine, [1] may one day provide hope to an estimated 1 in 250 people worldwide who suffer

from this condition.

“All of the disease characteristics we see

because of these mutations were reversed with CRISPR-Cas9 therapy. It’s

fair to say the success of this approach

completely exceeded our expectations,” said Eric Olson, Ph.D., Chair and Professor of Molecular Biology at UTSW, who

co-led the study with colleagues Rhonda Bassel-Duby, Ph.D., Professor of Molecular Biology, and Takahiko Nishiyama, M.D., Ph.D., a

postdoctoral fellow in the Olson lab.

DCM is caused by mutations in a gene

known as RNA binding motif protein 20

(RBM20), which affects the production of

hundreds of proteins in cardiac muscle cells

responsible for the heart’s pumping action.

This disease wreaks widespread havoc throughout

the heart, gradually

P:31

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 29

Reference:

1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.ade1633

Researchers use seaweed

molecules to improve

outcomes for bypass surgery

Researchers are using a natural material derived from seaweed to promote vascular

cell growth, prevent blood clots and improve the performance of synthetic vascular grafts used in heart bypass surgery.

The new approach, developed and tested at the University of Waterloo, is especially

important in cases involving small artificial blood vessels - those less than six millimetres

in diameter - which are prone to clots that can develop into full blockages.

“There is a crucial need to develop synthetic vascular graft materials that will

increase the rate of long-term functions,” said Dr Evelyn Yim, a chemical engineering professor and University Research Chair who leads the project.

Researchers added a material called fucoidan, which is made from seaweed, to

modify synthetic blood vessels. Fucoidan has a structure similar to heparin, a drug

used as an anticoagulant.

When applied with a nanotechnology technique known as micropatterning, fucoidan

promotes the growth of vascular cells around the inner surface of the graft, significantly

reducing the chances of clots forming.

For patients, the potential benefits include fewer complications, better quality of life

and less risk of the recurrence of blockages requiring additional drug treatment or surgery.

“A functional, off-the-shelf, small-diameter vascular graft will help save lives,”

said Yim, director of the Regenerative Nanomedicine Lab at Waterloo. “What’s

important is that they will be much longer-lasting and allow blood to flow freely.”

Gold standard for grafts

Bypass surgery is performed to restore blood flow to areas of the heart when vessels become blocked. Vessels harvested from the patient are the gold standard for

grafts, but limited availability often requires the use of artificial vessels.

In addition to heart bypass surgery, grafts are used in medical procedures to treat vascular

diseases and restore blood flow to vital organs and tissues, including the brain and legs.

When synthetic graft material doesn’t allow vascular cells to grow on the inside of an

artery or vessel, there is a high chance of clots, which can develop into full blockages or

cause inflammation that restricts blood flow.

Yim has successfully tested the new technique using fucoidan and micropatterning on

small animals and plans to expand to large animal testing before advancing to clinical trials.

Several researchers from the Department of Chemical Engineering at Waterloo

and the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Oregon Health and Science

University have collaborated on this project.

A paper on the work, Fucoidan and topography modification improved in situ

endothelialization on acellular synthetic vascular grafts, appears in the journal

Bioactive Materials [1]. Reference:

1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.10.011

Photo of the synthetic grafts made by the researchers

tists used this gene-editing technology to

swap a single nucleotide, the basic unit of

DNA, to correct one type of mutation. In

another set of cells, researchers replaced a

piece of DNA from mutated RBM20 with

a healthy segment of this gene.

After CRISPR-Cas9 treatment, the mutant

cells gradually lost characteristics inherent

to DCM: The protein produced by RBM20

moved to its normal place in the nucleus, and

the cells began making healthy proteins.

When the researchers delivered the

CRISPR-Cas9 treatment to 1-week-old

mice carrying one of these mutations, the

animals never developed enlarged hearts

and had normal life spans. Untreated mice

had symptoms mirroring those of human

DCM patients.

The scientists said that several challenges

remain before this therapy can be used in

DCM patients. Work is needed to ensure

that the effects of CRISPR-Cas9 are permanent and precise, and that the smallest dose

possible is delivered. Also to be determined

is whether the treatment could be used in

patients whose disease is more advanced.

However, Dr. Olson said he’s optimistic

that this system could be used to treat a variety of other familial diseases.

“The pace of this field is really breathtaking,” he said. “I expect that if this moves forward into patients, we’re not talking within

decades – we’re talking within years.”

Dr. Olson holds the Pogue Distinguished

Chair in Research on Cardiac Birth Defects;

The Robert A. Welch Distinguished Chair

in Science; and the Annie and Willie Nelson

Professorship in Stem Cell Research. He is

also Director of the Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine.

The pace of this field

is really breathtaking. I

expect that if this moves

forward into patients,

we’re not talking within

decades – we’re talking

within years.

P:32

Our GPS team

helps manage

the complex

logistics involved

in planning for

care far from

home

30 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

When most people hear the term “GPS”

– they might think of a ‘global positioning

system’ that directs them to their desired

destination. It is fitting, then, that GPS

also stands for the Global Patient Services programme at NewYork-Presbyterian

(NYP), which assists patients and their

families throughout the Middle East and

around the world to make it their destination – for state-of-the-art medical care and

the best in patient experience.

NewYork-Presbyterian is the only academic medical centre in the United States

affiliated with two world-class medical

schools, Weill Cornell Medicine and Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Its longstanding reputation for clinical excellence has put the hospital at the forefront

in terms of medical education, groundbreaking research, and patient-centric treatment.

Global Services Program: 24/7 ‘concierge”

service’ – for when it matters most

Each year, more than 5,000 international patients travel to NewYork-Presbyterian with

assistance from its Global Services Program,

which gives them access to the hospital’s

world-renowned Columbia University and

Weill Cornell Medicine physicians.

NYP has a long history of caring for patients in the Middle East and North Africa,

and our regional ‘ambassadors’ collaborate

closely with local governments and private

institutions in those regions to provide access to our services and making the entire

process a smooth one for patients. Our GPS

team of multilingual professionals is dedicated to assisting families, 24 hours a day,

7 days a week, to help manage the complex

logistics involved in planning for care far

from home, including:

• scheduling physician visits and clinical appointments

NewYork-Presbyterian:

Providing a direct

connection to first-class

medical care

NewYork-Presbyterian

• escorting patients to appointments

• explaining and interpreting medical

information, instructions, and procedures

• facilitating communication between

physicians, administrators and patients

• organizing global air ambulance,

ground ambulance, or other emergency

transport services for critically ill patients

• helping to arrange for hotels or furnished apartments, including NYP’s onsite facilities

• assisting families in understanding

the cost of care

Innovative treatments in these

specialties and others:

• Cancer Care: NYP is home to two

major cancer centres – the National Cancer Institute-designated Herbert Irving

Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia, and the Weill Cornell Medicine

Meyer Cancer Center at NewYork-Presbyterian. Patients benefit from the latest

anti-cancer drugs, targeted therapies, advanced radiation therapies, and emerging

minimally-invasive surgical procedures.

• Cardiology: NYP is renowned for its

latest interventional therapies and pioneering cardiac surgery techniques, including heart transplants. NewYork-Presbyterian is one of the leading centres in the

United States for innovative treatment of

adult heart conditions and for paediatric

cardiology.

• Neurosciences: NYP continues to

make clinical advances for conditions such

as glioblastoma and complex epilepsy, as

well as offering new applications for highintensity-focused ultrasound for neurological conditions.

• Orthopaedics: NYP treats patients of

all ages, from newborns to older adults, for

virtually every type of orthopaedic injury,

disease, or disorder to relieve symptoms and

restore comfort, function, and mobility.

• Paediatrics: For more than a decade,

NewYork-Presbyterian has been at the forefront of more paediatric treatments than any

other New York City metropolitan area.

NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center

NYP Global Patient Services Program

NewYork-Presbyterian’s Global Patient

Services Program starts you on your

journey to the very best medical care

that you or your loved one deserve.

For more information, contact:

• Issam Ramadan

Mob: +971 56 624 2588

Email: [email protected]

• NYP Main Office: +1 212 746 9100

Email: [email protected]

NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving

Medical Center

P:33

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 31

P:34

Heidelberg University Hospital

Hospital overview

Heidelberg University Hospital with its

more than 50 specialized clinical departments is one of the leading medical centres

in Europe. Innovative and effective diagnosis and therapy for all complex diseases

is guaranteed by world-renowned professors and highly experienced doctors.

World renowned physicians, modern

buildings with state-of-the-art equipment,

as well as the proximity and interlinking

of the specialist departments directly benefit our patients. Thousands of patients

from all over Germany and over 100

countries worldwide travel to Heidelberg

for treatment. Outstanding physicians

and researchers, among them Nobel Prize

winners have been working in research facilities in Heidelberg.

Focus on cancer treatment

The National Center for Tumor Diseases

(NCT) in Heidelberg is a national pioneer in

the diagnosis and therapy of cancer. Patients

with cancer are treated jointly by qualified

experts from different disciplines. As a joint

institution of Heidelberg University Hospital

and the German Cancer Research Center, it

is ensured that new therapeutic approaches

are developed and quickly put into practice.

Surgical oncology as well as radio-oncology

are integral parts in cancer treatment as well.

Heidelberg physicians work with state-ofMedicine of the highest standard

– world-class medical care

the-art equipment (including robot-assisted

surgery) and are highly experienced. For

example, the European Pancreas Center at

Heidelberg University Hospital is one of the

world’s leading centres for pancreatic cancer.

The Heidelberg Ion Beam Therapy

Center (HIT) is the first radiation facility

in Europe that works with both protons

and carbon ions. Children and patients

with certain tumours can be treated effectively here. This form of radiation can

for the first time benefit a larger number

of patients with previously incurable tumours.

Outstanding areas of expertise

• Oncology (all disciplines): surgical oncology (including robot-assisted surgery

[DaVinci system]), chemotherapy, stem

cell transplantation, innovative radiation

therapy including latest technologies, such

as proton-/heavy ion, comprehensive care

in the National Center for Tumor Diseases, pain centre

Heidelberg University Hospital

The International Office Team will gladly support you with your treatment inquiry and further questions and highly experienced specialists will

review your case.

• Visit us on: www.heidelberg-university-hospital.com

• email: [email protected]

• Phone: +49 (0)6221 56 6243

32 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

• Heart and vascular medicine

• Neurology and Neurosurgery

• Metabolism and hormonal disorders

• Gynaecology and perinatal medicine

• Orthopaedics

• Paediatrics

Services for international patients

and Arab patients includes:

• Multilingual team of the International Office at Heidelberg University

Hospital

• Certified interpreters

• Support to foreign patients in obtaining a medical visa to travel to Germany.

• Service is provided by friendly, English-speaking nursing personal

• All doctors speak fluent English, and

medical reports are written in English, if

desired

• Special requests regarding meals are

taken into consideration

• There is a prayer room available in

the hospital for our Muslim patients

P:36

34 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Health Industry Development Institute

(KHIDI), a government organization associated with Ministry of Health and Welfare

in Korea, will hold the “KOREA MEDTECH EXPERIENCE PAVILION” at Arab

Health from January 30 to February 2, 2023.

Visit the KOREA MED-TECH EXPERIENCE PAVILION to view and experience the excellent quality of Korean medical devices. You are invited to collaborate

with the Korean medical device compaVisit the Korean MedTech

Experience pavilion at

Arab Health 2023

Meet and collaborate with a range of excellent

and pioneering medical device companies

Korean Healthcare

nies who are seeking partners to grow their

businesses through one-to-one business

meetings during Arab Health 2023.

Nine companies will be showcasing their

medical products in the fields of surgery, diagnostics and medical imaging. Five of the

companies were selected by the Korean Government because of their pioneering medical

technology that will advance healthcare.

KHIDI is actively promoting and supporting the marketing of these innovative

medical device companies in an effort to

firmly establish the sector in Korea.

KHIDI looks forward to seeing you at pavilion H7.G50 during Arab Health 2023.

Korean pavilion H7.G50

Contact

Secretariat of KOREA MED-TECH

EXPERIENCE PAVILION of the KHIDI

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.khidi.or.kr/device

P:37

Deep Bio Inc. is an AI healthcare company with in-house expertise in deep learning and cancer pathology.

The company was founded in 2015

with the transformative mission: To advance patient outcomes by driving innovation in technology, while empowering

clinicians by providing the tools to make

critical decisions.

Deep Bio envisions a world where clinicians are empowered with technology designed to unlock personalized insights and

enhance healthcare delivery, so they can

focus more on what they do best: Caring

for their patients.

As a first step towards this goal, Deep

DEEP BIO to showcase

expertise in deep learning

and cancer pathology

Bio strives to radically improve efficiency

and accuracy of pathologic cancer diagnosis and prognosis by equipping pathologists with deep learning-based IVD

SaMDs (In Vitro Diagnostics Software

as a Medical Device), for optimal cancer

treatment decisions.

DeepDx Prostate

DeepDx Prostate detects and highlights areas

of interest on prostate needle biopsy whole

slide images (WSIs). It provides various automated metrics for more accurate and consistent results and facilitates faster pathology

workflow. In a clinical validation, its performance was demonstrated to provide specialist-level support to pathologists.

Key Features

• Coloured overlays for each Gleason

pattern at the gland-level: Pattern 3, Pattern 4, Pattern 5

• Tumour & Pattern Quantification:

The proportion of each Gleason pattern

out of the total tumour area and tumourto-tissue ratio quantified automatically

• Auto Length Measurement: Automatic measurements of total tissue and

total tumour lengths

• Use cases First Read Concurrent read

• Quality control and R&D

• Real world tested

• Deployed in US CLIA labs, successful analysis of 700K+ core biopsy images

between 2019 and 2021.

n To learn more, visit www.deepbio.co.kr.

email: [email protected]

DeepDx Prostate: Clinically-validated & CE marked AI software for prostate cancer

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 35

P:38

36 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Neurosona, established in 2017, has a

research support agreement with the

Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH)

of Harvard Medical School and is leading

the world in research and development of

low-intensity focused ultrasound devices

for treatment of brain diseases.

Based on the differentiated brain stimulation technology, Neurosona is conducting clinical trials on brain diseases including major depressive disorder, Alzheimer’s

disease, neuropathic pain, disorders of

consciousness, sleep disorders, and stroke

recovery in specific areas of the entire

brain, including the deep brain.

Image-guided low-intensity focused

ultrasound technology

Neurosona’s low-Intensity focused ultrasound technology accurately transmits

low-intensity acoustic energy with low

heat generation from the brain cortex to

the deep brain for neuromodulation or

blood-brain barrier opening in specific

brain areas. Since it hardly generates any

heat, the technology is relatively safe and

it can accurately stimulate specific areas,

including the deep brain.

Ultrasound stimulator system

Neurosona has developed the low-Intensity focused ultrasound stimulator system

(NS-US series) for application of noninvasive interventions of brain diseases,

such as major depressive disorder and Alzheimer’s disease, by precisely stimulating

specific areas of the whole brain, including the brain cortex and deep brain with

the low-intensity focused ultrasound of

less than 250 kHz that has been proven

to be safe.

Neurosona’s focused ultrasound stimulation system enables good access to the deep

brain for treatment. In addition, since this

system offers ultrasound according to parameters optimized for target diseases, it

Neurosona specialises in development

of focused ultrasound devices for

treatment of brain diseases

can provide patient-customized precise

stimulation for local areas of the whole

brain. Based on these advantages, Neurosona continued to improve the ease of use

of this system for patients and doctors.

Neurosona’s low-intensity focused ultrasound stimulation system NS-US200

was designated as an innovative medical

device in August 2021 in recognition of

its innovative technology and clinical improvement potential by the Korean Ministry of Food and Drug Safety.

n For more information, visit: www.neurosona.com Email: [email protected]

Korean Healthcare

P:39

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 37

VUNO is a global leader in medical AI

with a proven track record developing and

commercializing medical AI deep learning

solutions. VUNO strives to realize the pos

-

sibilities of AI technology in medicine to

improve quality of life for mankind.

Their goal is to develop and commercial

-

ize AI solutions that leverage a wide range of

medical data including bio-signals, imaging,

and digital pathology to detect and prevent

disease early on.

Founded in 2014, VUNO was the first

company to successfully obtain Korea

FDA(MFDS) approval for medical AI soft

-

ware. Since then, VUNO has rapidly ex

-

panded its commercial presence and product

portfolio to encompass a diverse and compre

-

hensive line up of impactful and clinically rel

-

evant solutions.

With a proven R&D and commercial

track record, including a history of success

winning international technical challenges

coupled with global deployments in over

500 hospitals, VUNO is an undisputed

leader in the global medical AI arena.

n For more information,

visit: [email protected]

VUNO

specialises

in medical

AI deep

learning

solutions

P:40

38 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Since its establishment in 2020, Surginus Co., Ltd.

has been developing and manufacturing products

with the value of improving quality and patient-centred technology.

For the first time in Korea, they have developed

a product (Foldable Skin Closure) that uses a new

type of suture method without using needles, threads

and staples.

In addition, in order to make products that can give

satisfaction to patients and medical staff, they are manufactured in a clean room (ISO 8, Class 10,000), and ‘ISO

13485:2016, FDA (Listing)’ has been acquired.

Surginus will continue to strive to increase its

value in the future.

Surginus

develops new

type of suture

method

Korean Healthcare

n For more information, visit: [email protected]

P:41

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 39

LAON MEDI Inc. provides medical solutions based on AI (Artificial Intelligence)

technology with a mission to create a happy world with technology.

Launched in 2018 by its parent company

LAON PEOPLE Inc. (KOSDAQ-listed), it

is a young company that was spun-off last

year and established as a separate corporation.

Based on their achievements in Machine Vision, they have developed their

own AI algorithms, and based on this, they

have expanded their scope to transportation, agriculture, military, and medical and

dental fields. AI is now a reality, not a field

LAON MEDI’s AI tech analyzes airflow

to detect of obstructive sleep apnoea

of study, and application in the medical industry is essential.

For more accurate diagnosis, LAON

MEDI is researching and developing

medical software that is convenient and

useful in real life.

Obstructive sleep apnoea

LAON MEDI’s software is an AI technology that analyzes airflow in the airway based

on the patient’s CT/CBCT imaging and

determines whether there is obstructive

sleep apnoea. This technology consists of

a medical image derivation model that extracts upper airway features from CT images, a flow factor derivation model that

predicts flow characteristics according to

airway features, and a sleep apnoea severity diagnosis model that determines the severity of obstructive sleep apnoea from the

patient’s ergonomic information.

Using this technology, it is possible to

identify the morphological factors of the

patient’s airway and quantitatively present the flow factors, air pressure in the

airway and the degree of airway closure

(strain rate). In addition, the derived factors help doctors make a final diagnosis

by analyzing the possibility of obstructive

sleep apnoea.

n For more information, visit: www.laon-medi.com Email: [email protected]

P:42

40 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Founded in 2014, FCU Ultrasound specializes in developing and manufacturing handheld ultrasound devices and probes.

As a professional medical device manufacturer, FCU Ultrasound have

ISO13485, KGMP, MFDS, CE, and FDA certification products.

They have maintained a high growth rate every year. And, in 2021,

they recorded more than 70% growth year-on-year, and nearly 90% of

their sales were exports.

FCU Ultrasound manufacture OEM transducers (single crystal, composite, bulk PZT, low-cost PZT) for a variety of applications with technology that meets the price and performance based on customers’ needs.

They are gradually expanding from OEM supply to their own branded products. In particular, the handheld ultrasound is equipped with a

needle navigation solution for the first time in the world. Based on this,

they hope to target the world market in earnest to create new business

models with global companies in the digital healthcare field.

PC based needling training tool for ultrasound

guided procedures, eZSimulator

Various training

• For training of the probe-needle coordination in real application

scenarios

• The most intuitive tool to learn two hands eye coordination

Independent training

• Without the need of an ultrasound systems or special phantoms.

World’s first handheld navigation ultrasound, SC1

KEY POINTS

1. Best-in-class image quality

2. Needle guidance system

3. Easy to learn, easy to use

Needle Guidance System

By using magnetic sensors, SC1 recognizes and tracks a magnetized needle.

In-plane approach. Align confidently

• It is easy to perform the procedure while checking the alignment of

the probe icon and needle on the screen.

• Through the guideline, you can check where the needle is currently

located in the body.

Out-of-Plane approach. Just set the target, and inject

• While it is usually difficult to know the distance and depth from the

needle to the target, SC1 allows you to know these prior to insert and to

adjust the angle of the needle accordingly.

Procedure oriented ultrasound for safe procedures, for everyone.

FCU Ultrasound focuses on handheld

ultrasound devices and probes

Korean Healthcare

n For more information, email: [email protected]

Procedure oriented

ultrasound for safe

procedures, for everyone.

P:43

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 41

Established in 2004, Sunmedix Co., Ltd., specialises in manufacturing various kinds of medical devices, especially products related to

surgical procedures.

Their mission is: “For the wholesome daily lives of our neighbours.”

Through constant brainstorming, Sunmedix realizes and customizes products based on their buyer’s needs. They export their products

to more than 30 countries with ISO13485 and CE certifications.

Dcos DVT Prevention Pump System

Dcos is a portable and detachable pneumatic device with 3-chambers intended to prevent post-operative DVT (Deep Vein Thrombosis). It delivers a sequential pneumatic pulse through an air cuff

and stimulates blood circulation, and reduces pain and swelling.

Dcos is a lightweight device weighing approximately 326 grams,

which greatly enhances it convenience for the user.

The great advantage of Dcos is that it is not limited to use in the

operation room or recovery room. It is free of obstructions compared to the bed-mounted type.

Sunmedix is supplying the world’s first E.O. sterile cuffs,

which have has a great ripple effect in the market.

Gcos Bipolar Vessel Sealer

Gcos is a sterile single-use electrosurgical device used in coagulation (haemostasis) and incision of the blood vessels and

tissues, to be connected to a medical electrosurgical generator unit.

It reduces blood loss, procedure time and patient length of stay

compared to sutures and clips.

Features:

• Ergonomic handle

• Freely rotatable shaft

• Safety system for blade operation & auto-lock function

• Soft cutting & less tissue damage

• Compatible with different electrosurgical generators

• Minimally invasive procedure: minimizing tissue damage and

thermal injury

• Unique ergonomic design: eliminates deviation of the wrist, reduces carpal tunnel pressure and eradicates fatigue

• Efficient & precise surgery

Sunmedix’s portable

& detachable pneumatic

device helps prevent

post-operative DVT

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 41

P:44

42 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

meerecompany is a global company that

focuses on innovation and aims to maximize the happiness of its customers, employees and shareholders. Since 1984,

meerecompany has been responding to the

rapidly changing technological environment and conducting research to usher in

the innovations of the future.

Revo-i surgical robot

The Revo-i system is a safe and affordable surgical robot which utilizes the latest technologies with the aim of providing better care to

more patients anywhere around the world.

Features of the Revo-i system include:

informative imaging, intuitive control, advanced devices and virtual training.

Since 2007, meerecompany has conMeerecompany develops

surgical robots with

advanced technology

tinuously strived to reflect the voices and

opinions of medical professionals, while

also taking into consideration the difficulties of managing a hospital with dynamic

surgical environments.

meerecompany’s focus is to reduce this

burden by making an affordable surgical

robotic device and delivering a reliable

product with high-level service from their

professional care team.

meerecompany strives to offer an excellent programme that synergizes with hospitals, surgeons, patients and corporations.

Introducing Revo-i

Master Console

The Master Console is the Revo-i surgical

robotic system’s control centre. A surgeon

can issue commands to the master console

located outside of the sterilized area by

controlling the instrument with 3DHD vision during the surgery.

Operation Cart

The Operation Cart assists surgeons in

performing surgeries with the use of Revo-i

free-wrist instruments and a 3D endoscope

camera while minimizing tremors and micro-movements.

Vision Cart

The Vision Cart enables surgeons to clearly

visualize the overall process of the surgery.

The Revo-i image processing system delivers surgical images for surgeons and OR staff

to help them communicate better.

n For more information, email: [email protected]

Korean Healthcare

P:45

LIVSMED, established in June 2011, is a

medical device company specializing in laparoscopic devices. Their goal and vision is to

lead the global medical device industry with

their unique products beginning with ArtiSential, their multi-joint, multi-DOF laparoscopic instrument that allows 360-degree

movement in laparoscopy and overcomes

the various limitations of existing straighttype instruments and surgical robots.

Approved by the Korean FDA in 2018,

LIVSMED has received awards for its innovative technology and contribution to public

welfare, as well as being chosen as “Innovative Medical Device Company” by the Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare in 2020.

LIVSMED strives to contribute to life

extension and overall healthcare of all

mankind by creating innovative products while adhering to the highest ethics.

LIVSMED’s mission is to bring surgery

with precision to the hands of doctors, one

patient at a time.

ArtiSential: The innovative nextgeneration surgical instrument

ArtiSential is a disposable laparoscopic

medical instrument usable in all minimally

invasive surgeries including gastrointestinal, thoracic, hepato-pancreatic, colorectal surgeries and others.

ArtiSential is characterized by its total 360 degrees of freedom and intuitiveness, which distinguishes it from existing

straight-line instruments and their limited movement. ArtiSential’s multi-jointed

end-effector provides surgeons with precise

control which is essential for accessing narrow surgical sites and performing with dexterity in laparoscopy. In addition, ArtiSential’s end-tool moves in synchronization

with the user’s hand motions. Its intuitive

control provides much higher ease of use.

ArtiSential’s end-tool functions similarly

to that of a surgical robot, since the instrument moves in all directions smoothly with

the help of its multi-jointed technology.

ArtiSential is a hand-held device which

can be used in existing surgical environments without any additional devices.

LIVSMED’s laparoscopic medical

instruments enable precision surgery

This is advantageous in aspects of costeffectiveness and efficiency.

The company has a variety of end-tool

types (e.g. forceps/grasper, needle holder,

dissector, hook, spatula, clip applier, etc.),

selectable by surgical need or users’ comfort.

ArtiSential’s products come in various

lengths (25cm, 38cm, 45cm) and sizes

(5mm, 8mm). Some types have bipolar/

monopolar energy options.

n For more information, visit: www.livsmed.com Email: [email protected]

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 43

P:46

Radiology

44 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

For the first time, a team of researchers

at the Technical University of Munich

(TUM) has integrated the dark-field Xray method into a CT scanner suitable for

clinical use. Dark-field imaging provides

additional information to conventional Xray imaging. With the new prototype, it is

now possible to produce three-dimensional dark-field X-ray images.

Computed tomography (CT) is one of

the most important clinical methods for

precise and fast diagnostics. By combining

Researchers integrate

dark field X-ray with

conventional CT technology

multiple X-ray images three-dimensional

images of the patient are generated.

With dark-field imaging, additional information on fine tissue structures, in particular in the lung, is now accessible. Until

now, technical challenges have prevented

the integration of this new technology into

clinical CT scanners to examine patients.

A team of researchers working with

Franz Pfeiffer, Professor for Biomedical

Physics and Director of the Munich Institute of Biomedical Engineering at TUM,

has now developed a CT scanner that

combines both X-ray technologies [1].

“For the first time, we showed that

dark-field X-ray technology can also be

integrated into a clinical CT scanner.

Although this technology is in its early

stages, pre-clinical studies with mice have

demonstrated clear benefits from darkfield CT scans, especially for capturing images of lung tissue,” says Franz Pfeiffer, who

headed the study.

The new CT prototype has already been

Prof. Dr. Franz Pfeiffer with the dark-field CT scanner.

P:47

Radiology

used successfully with a thorax phantom,

a model of a human upper body, and is

large enough for the intended applications with real patients.

Conventional X-ray imaging

With conventional X-ray equipment, the

X-rays are attenuated by the intervening

tissue as they travel from the source to

the detector. This effect is used to produce

images based on the varying degrees of attenuation associated with different tissue

types and structures. That is why bones

and similar structures, which have a stronger attenuating effect, appear white in Xrays, while more transparent tissue types

such as the lung produce darker images.

Dark-field X-ray imaging

Dark-field imaging, by contrast, makes

use of the small-angle scattering of the

X-rays. When the X-rays interact with

materials of different densities such as the

interface between lung tissue and air, they

are scattered. The analysis of this scattering effect yields additional information

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2118799119

on very fine tissue structures, which is

otherwise not accessible with conventional X-ray images

.

Grating technology

for dark-field imaging

To detect the scattering of the X-ray radiation, a set of three optical gratings is

required. They are placed between the Xray source and detector. When X-rays pass

through these gratings, a characteristic

pattern is produced at the detector. When

a sample or person is then positioned in

the beam path, this characteristic pattern

is changed. These deviations are then used

to analyze the structure of the sample or

the person’s tissue.

New hardware and

software for dark-field CT

The implementation of the dark-field

method in a human-size CT scanner poses

various technical challenges. Until now,

this has limited dark-field CT devices to a

scale much smaller than would be needed

for human patients. Apart from the size, the

Prof. Dr. Franz Pfeiffer (back, left), Professor for Biomedical Physics, and his team have developed a

prototype of a clinical CT scanner which combines dark-field and conventional X-ray technology (back

right: Dr. Thomas Koehler, front left: Clemens Schmid, front right: Manuel Viermetz).

fast rotation of the scan unit also creates

special difficulties for the technical design.

The scanning unit of CT scanners,

known as the gantry, rotates at very high

speeds. This causes vibrations that affect

the finely-tuned components in the interior of the device. Based on a detailed

analysis of these vibrations, the team was

able to use them to implement the required shift between the gratings needed

for dark-field imaging. To analyze the

scans, they developed new algorithms to

filter out the vibration effects based on

reference scans.

“With the dark-field CT prototype, we

can capture conventional and dark-field

X-ray images in a single scan. This yields

additional information that could be used

in the future not only to diagnose lung diseases, but also to differentiate between various types of kidney stones and tissue deposits,” says Manuel Viermetz, one of the two

first authors of the study. As the next step,

the researchers plan to further optimize the

dark-field CT prototype and prepare for the

first scans of human patients.

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 45

P:48

46 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

A new method for determining whether

patients with heart disease need coronary

stents or bypass surgery is more effective than the angiogram, which is currently used, according to research from

UTHealth Houston Heart & Vascular.

A team led by K. Lance Gould, MD, professor and the Martin Bucksbaum Distinguished

University Chair in Heart Disease with McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston, used positron emission tomography

(PET) imaging technology to map coronary

blood flow and its outcomes – namely, subendocardial ischemia – among patients with

heart disease. The study was published in

JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging [1].

Most forms of heart disease cause myocardial damage. Myocardial ischemia

occurs when blood flow to the heart is

reduced, preventing the heart muscle

from receiving enough oxygen. When

myocardial ischemia affects the deep, or

subendocardial, layer of the left ventricular muscle, it is known as subendocardial

ischemia.

Subendocardial ischemia is commonly

diagnosed in patients with cardiovascular

disease, but it is not quantified by current

imaging tools. Gould’s team developed

the PET technology, software, and clinical validation for defining the size and severity of this early stage of coronary artery

disease.

“The cumulative data reveals that all

randomized trials of coronary stents and

bypass surgery have failed to improve survival after revascularization due to profoundly flawed patient selection based on

the angiogram,” said Gould, who was first

author on the study. “Thus, the coronary

angiogram is not the gold standard for

determining stents or bypass surgery, but

PET technology more effective than

angiogram at determining need for

coronary stents, bypass surgery

rather, quantitative myocardial perfusion

by PET is the gold standard.”

Significantly, the paper confirmed the

team’s previous research by proving the

PET threshold of severity at which stents

and bypass surgery improve survival compared to medical treatment alone. The angiogram – an X-ray test that helps doctors

evaluate blockages in the arterial system –

shows how to do stents or bypass surgery,

Gould said, but not whether those procedures should be done at all.

Gould, who began working at UTHealth

Houston in 1979 as a professor and director of the division of cardiology, stepped

aside from administrative duties in 1987 to

focus clinically and scientifically on PET

imaging and quantitative coronary arteriography for identifying segmental and diffuse coronary artery disease, measuring its

severity and reversing it by vigorous risk

factor modification.

“Several equally paradigm-changing papers are underway for the coming year,”

Gould said. “For example, our preliminary

data show that virtual revascularization on

cardiac PET images predicts survival outcomes before actually doing stents or bypass surgery, as a guide to making decisions

for or against those procedures.”

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmg.2022.05.016

Radiology

P:49

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 47

P:50

48 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Regular postsurgical screening is critical for patients with lung cancer. In cases

involving early-stage non-small cell lung

cancer, up to half of patients will experience recurrence within the first two years

after surgery.

For these reasons, guidelines by the

U.S. National Comprehensive Cancer

Network and other cancer groups recommend computed tomography (CT) scans

every three to six months for patients

who have had malignant lung tumours

surgically removed. However, a new study

by researchers at Washington University

School of Medicine in St. Louis found no

improvements in survival or recurrence

rates among patients who followed the

protocol, compared with those who were

scanned every six months to one year.

“Our findings suggest that lung cancer

treatment guidelines should consider less

frequent surveillance imaging than current recommendations,” said the study’s

senior author, Varun Puri, MD, a thoracic

surgeon and professor of surgery. “Annual

surveillance would simplify guidelines and

may result in better, easier postoperative

care for early-stage patients.”

The study is published 28 November

2022 in the Journal of the National Cancer

Institute.

Non-small cell lung cancer accounts for

84% of all lung cancer cases, according

to the American Cancer Society, and the

overall five-year survival rate is 25%.

The researchers focused on the first two

years after surgery since that is when the

risk of lung cancer recurrence is highest.

More frequent CT scans

not associated with

improved outcomes after

lung cancer surgery

After two to three years, cancer organizations typically recommend annual scans

until the end of life.

“Scanning too frequently can be associated with unnecessary anxiety for

patients and increased healthcare costs,”

said Dr Puri, also a research member of

Siteman Cancer Center at Washington University School of Medicine and

Barnes-Jewish Hospital. “Patients who

receive scans to check for recurrent cancer are understandably anxious, especially

since it can take several days for results to

be received. This phenomenon is sometimes called ‘scanxiety.’ It is obviously

important to minimize scanxiety when it

can be done safely.”

For the study, the researchers analyzed de-identified medical records in a

database maintained by the U.S. Veterans Health Administration, the United

States’ largest integrated healthcare delivery system. The researchers examined

information involving 6,171 patients

with stage 1 non-small cell lung cancer who underwent surgery from Oct. 1,

2006, through Sept. 31, 2016. One patient group received scans every three to

six months, and the other group every six

to 12 months.

In all cases, more scans did not offer improved health, including among different

tumour sizes, tumour stages and types of

surgical procedures. Recurrence was observed in 22% of patients and did not differ

based on the frequency of scanning. Similarly, overall survival remained the same

between the two groups, with about 65%

of patients surviving at least five years.

The average age of the patients was

67.5. The patients were predominantly

male and white; however, statistical modelling controlled for different ages, genders

and races.

“We found that certain patients had received more frequent CT scans, including

patients who smoked and patients who

had certain types of operations,” said the

study’s first author, Brendan Heiden, MD,

a surgical resident and research fellow at

Washington University.

Heiden continued: “The VA treats a

unique patient population that consists

mostly of males with significant smoking

histories. Therefore, we believe that our

findings are most applicable to veterans

with lung cancer. However, prior studies

examining non-VA patient populations

have found similar results to ours, suggesting that the results may apply more

broadly to the general population. More

research is needed.”

Our findings

suggest that lung

cancer treatment

guidelines

should consider

less frequent

surveillance imaging

than current

recommendations.

Radiology

Reference: doi: http://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djac208

P:52

50 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

30 years of UpToDate

Wolters Kluwer

Clinical decision support (CDS) is an essential tool [1] for empowering clinicians

with immediate, evidence-based knowledge, no matter how quickly the evidence

changes. Ubiquitous as CDS systems are today, it wasn’t all that long ago that providers

had to go out of their way to track down

answers to vital patient care questions.

A lot has changed in the world of patient care over the past 30 years. It’s hard to

imagine that 30 years ago when clinicians

had a question, they had no choice but to

stop what they were doing and run out to

the library to research the latest best practices. There was no guarantee the information was relevant to their specific needs,

and even if it was, the content was likely at

least a year old due to publishing timelines.

Building a better point-of-care

solution for clinicians

That was the inspiration behind the very

first clinical decision support tools like

UpToDate® [2]. Over the years, having

electronic access to clinical research has

been a game changer for healthcare professionals, helping them keep up with the

crushing number of new studies, best practices, and therapies. Thirty years later, UpToDate is the most widely used and universally respected resource for efficiently

accessing clinical evidence at the point of

care. The advantages of having UpToDate

right by their side whenever and wherever

clinicians and healthcare professionals

have questions has helped it grow to:

• 44,000+ institutional sites

• 190+ countries

• 2 million+ users

• 650 million+ topic views per year

About 1.6 million times every day, a clinician turns to UpToDate for support with their

decision-making – and about a third of the

time [3], it changes their practice. It could be in

a hospital ward; a doctor’s office; a lecture hall;

an emergency room; a laboratory; or wherever

else the point of care happens to be.

Today, clinicians around the world rely

on UpToDate to support their confidence

in clinical decision-making:

• “Having UpToDate in my pocket always gives me strength and confidence.”

– Dr. Turgut Kacan, Associate Professor, Oncologist, Bursa Yuksek Ihtisas MOH, Turkey

• “It’s like an attending physician.

When I have some clinical question, I always consult UpToDate.”

– Dr. Hiroshi Sudo, MD, FACP,

Department of Medicine, Ofuna Chuo

Hospital, Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan

• “The clinical teams trust UpToDate.

It gives them the confidence to make care

decisions because they trust the information, because it’s evidence-based.”

– Dr. Jonathan James, Chief Strategy

Officer, Axis Medical Center,

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

• “UpToDate has the value of a stethoscope and fever thermometer for us physicians. The tool has replaced quite a lot of

textbooks and journals.”

– Dr. Michael Zeller, Senior Physician,

Pediatrics, Klinikum Dritter Orden,

Munich, Germany

Clinical decision support during COVID-19

But what happens when there is no clear, actionable, evidence-based knowledge to share?

In the months leading up to the pandemThe evolution of clinical decision support

and the future of evidence-based medicine

P:53

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 51

Wolters Kluwer

References

1. https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/expert-insights/in-an-increasingly-complex-healthcare-system-information-is-the-best-medicine

2. https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/solutions/uptodate

3. https://assets.contenthub.wolterskluwer.com/api/public/content/fcaf3046dec8457fa898900b4380bfd4?v=72635d88

4. https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/solutions/uptodate/resources/covid-19

5. https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/know/healthcare-challenges/reducing-clinical-variation

6. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmsa022615

7. https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2017.1248

Watch this video to hear

from Wolters Kluwer

leadership as they look

back on 30 years of how

UpToDate has become the

standard for evidence-based

clinical decisions.

>> https://bit.ly/3vojMdL

ic, CDS tools contained just a few topics on

the coronavirus. And in the early months,

there was little published literature to help

clinicians understand the signs, symptoms,

and consequences of being infected. Based

on input and guidance from global experts

in the field of infectious disease, the content

in UpToDate has expanded [4] to 90 topics

on the disease – and was refreshed more

than 2,000 times to synthesize new learnings as quickly as it was being published.

Focused on a future of

evidence-based medicine

While the delivery method and technology has evolved, the core principle of

thoughtfully answering questions with actionable information at the point of care

has never wavered.

At the heart of UpToDate is an unparalleled community of over 7,400 authors and

editors from around the world who share

a singular passion – writing and editing

trusted evidence-based content and guidance to produce harmonized content.

One of the challenges the healthcare

industry continues to grapple with is the

potential patient harms and organizational inefficiencies caused by variability

in care [5]. According to a New England

Journal of Medicine study [6], only about

55% of recommended care is actually given to patients. Data [7] published in 2018

found that only 8% of U.S. adults over

the age of 35 received all of appropriate,

high-priority, preventive clinical services

they required, while 5% received no such

services at all.

With each year, UpToDate seeks to

further reduce harmful variations in care

by connecting healthcare professionals

to the most recent standards of practice,

latest literature and recommendations on

treatment options and diagnostic tests,

and clinical pathways.

As we look to the next 30 years, we know

the speed at which new medical advances

become available will only continue to

accelerate. Distilling all that down into

a discrete recommendation for a specific

patient – while making the entire experience easy and transparent for clinicians –

will be one of the most important things

we can do to help ensure every decision at

the point of care results in the best possible

outcome for that patient.

Watch video:

30 years of UpToDate

P:54

52 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Since Priory opened its inaugural Wellbeing Centre in Dubai in 2017, the worldrenowned mental healthcare provider has

gone from strength to strength across the

region. This has coincided with a period

in which the mental health landscape in

many Gulf countries has witnessed a transformation, according to the company’s

Chief Operating Officer, Will Goodwin.

During the last five years, Priory has

opened two more Wellbeing Centres – one

in Abu Dhabi and, more recently, one in

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This is in addition

to operating a school and training institute

for young people with autism. Such is the

increase in demand for mental health services that in the New Year, Priory will be

relocating its current Wellbeing Centre in

Dubai from Healthcare City to larger premises in City Walk. This new location will

enable an expansion of provision to include

adult and children’s services, alongside psycho-educational assessments for conditions

such as autism, with associated treatments

including speech and occupational therapy.

Goodwin is in no doubt that some of this

demand is an after-effect of the pandemic,

which has led to an increase in anxiety levels, particularly among women and younger

people. Priory, for example, experienced an

increase in volume of patients as a direct

consequence of this and it led to the launch

of its telehealth services, which supported

patients remotely during this time. This has

now become a useful, mainstay addition to

support its services for patients who may

want to use a digital medium and much of

the private mental health sector was quick

to incorporate telemedicine into practice.

This was not only to meet the increase in

demand, but also to facilitate the availabilDemand for mental health services

grow across the Middle East

Mental Health

ity and accessibility to the services.

However, Goodwin feels strongly that

the pandemic also exacerbated existing

mental health challenges, such as the growing influence and dependence on electronic devices and social media. Nevertheless,

such issues have also encouraged more people to become more aware of their mental

health needs generally. In a recent study,

more than 40% of those surveyed said they

are paying more attention to their mental

health following the pandemic.

Breaking the silence of mental stigma

“Mental wellbeing was already one of the

key components in the UAE GovernPriory Healthcare continues its expansion across the Middle East as

attitudes to mental healthcare witness an encouraging transformation,

according to Will Goodwin, the Chief Operating Officer at Priory.

Will Goodwin, Priory COO, Trevor Torrington, Priory CEO, and Patrick Moody,

Her Majesty’s Ambassador to the UAE

P:55

ment’s national agenda of the UAE Vision

2021 and the UAE National Happiness

Agenda,” says Goodwin.

“It was also already fostering and encouraging local and international enterprises to

establish innovative services in the mental

health sector. But during the pandemic the

Government really came into its own and

further raised the profile of mental health.

“Many forward-thinking and targeted

mental health support initiatives were introduced, such as a national campaign for

mental health support launched by the National Programme for Happiness and Wellbeing, the Employee Assistance programme

(Hayat) to assist federal government employees dealing with mental health challenges and ReacHer a WhatsApp mental

health support and consultation service for

Emirati women, to name a few.

“Such activities really helped seize the

opportunity to break through the silence of

mental health stigma and encourage people

to talk openly about their mental wellbeing

and ill health. Importantly, this improved

landscape for people to be able to seek help

earlier is incredibly beneficial in treating

conditions and gaining the best possible,

long-term outcomes,” says Goodwin.

He reports that many mental health clinicians are seeing increases in the number

and severity of cases in their clinics. This

may be an actual increase or that many previously undiagnosed individuals are now

coming forward and seeking support. For

example, depression and anxiety are more

common as a result of the recent pandemic. People became socially isolated, they

were ‘cut off’ from recreational and health

promoting activities, there were also more

financial and social stressors, to name few.

Either way, Goodwin is pleased that Priory

will be able to help support the increased volume of patients that are now reaching out for

help. He is keen to point out how this increase

in demand is now being complemented by the

expansion of mental health services in the private sector generally.

Access to support

Additionally, access to its support has been

made more readily accessible as a result of

the improved inclusion of mental health

by a number of health insurance providers.

This is aptly reflected by a new empanelment between the Priory Wellbeing Centre

in Abu Dhabi and one of the UAE’s leading insurance providers, Daman. As a result

of this improved health insurance coverage

for mental health, Goodwin expects more

people – both Emiratis and expatriates – to

feel encouraged to seek help.”

Goodwin believes the constantly evolving

and progressive mental healthcare landscape

in the UAE, in addition to its supportive visionary nature have been pivotal in its current

success and plans for future expansion.

“Our plans are to expand our services

in the UAE and KSA to support our integrated model for education and healthcare.

We have been able to transfer the quality

of our UK services into the Middle East

market successfully and our plans include

further developing our healthcare offer to

include inpatient services and, in education, the development of further provision

across the UAE and KSA geographies. We

feel extremely privileged to be a part of the

country’s efforts to provide a world class

mental health and educational service.”

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 53

Photo by Matthew Ball/Unsplash

P:56

54 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Since its foundation in 1972, HUMAN has

been developing and marketing comprehensive solutions for in vitro diagnostics (IVD).

The portfolio ranges from classical clinical

chemistry to innovative molecular diagnostic

methods as well as special applications such as

assays for autoimmunity testing.

The German medium-sized company

has its headquarters in Wiesbaden (near

Frankfurt). In addition, HUMAN maintains regional sales offices in the United

Arab Emirates (Sharjah), Singapore, China, India, Panama and has local HUMAN

representatives in many other countries.

With its approximately 300 employees

from over 40 nations, its worldwide service and delivery capacities, and a broad

network of long-standing sales partners,

HUMAN supports medical laboratories in

more than 160 countries.

From a reagent specialist to a global player

“HUMAN has grown from a small reagent

manufacturer to a global player in in vitro

diagnostics,” says Dr Björn Breth, CEO of

HUMAN since 2019. “For 50 years now,

we have been helping to improve healthcare in many places around the world.

With our comprehensive portfolio, we

cover a wide range of regional needs, from

semi-automated devices to fully automated

solutions. Through our logistics and services, we are a recognized partner to numerous governmental and non-governmental

organizations (NGOs) in support of medical care, particularly in crisis areas.”

At the development and production

site in Magdeburg, scientists work with

modern technologies on further developments and innovations with a focus on

HUMAN Diagnostics celebrates its 50th anniversary

HUMAN Diagnostics

clinical chemistry, haematology, haemostasis, and immunoassays. These products

are “Made in Germany” and are in compliance with the highest European quality

standards.

Focus product lines

Clinical chemistry

HUMAN offers a broad range of routine and

special tests in a variety of package concepts

to serve the needs of modern state-of-the-art

laboratories. In the same way, all HUMAN

analyzers and systems emphasize functionality

and modern workflow requirements to meet

customer and market demand.

Haematology

HUMAN’s automated haematology products

are designed for small to large laboratories and

range from 30 to 80 samples throughput per

hour. HUMAN offers both 3-part and 5-part

differential systems with specially developed

and dedicated reagents suitable for human

and veterinary applications.

Haemostasis

HUMAN offers laboratories integrated

haemostasis test solutions with HEMOSTAT reagents and HumaClot analyzers.

Semi-automated, as well as fully automated

HumaClot analyzers support an accurate

and economical assessment of the coagulation status. The applications of the HEMOSTAT reagents are pre-programmed

and fully validated. The HUMAN coagulation portfolio includes a broad range of

commonly performed screening parameters, indicating medical disorders related

to coagulation and fibrinolysis.

CLIA | FIA Immunoassay systems

Chemiluminescence- and fluorescence-based

immunoassay systems are platforms that complement each other perfectly. HumaCLIA

150 is the ideal immunoassay system for testing in central and more remote laboratories.

HumaFIA on the other hand fits into small

to medium throughput laboratories and is intended to run low throughput parameters also

as a backup system for HumaCLIA 150.

For inquiries contact our regional sales

representatives:

HUMAN Diagnostics Middle East FZE

Office: Q3 - 198

P. O. Box 122348 Sharjah, U. A. E.

Phone: +971 6 5578650

E-mail: [email protected]

• From reagent specialist to global player with a broad network of long-standing

distribution partners in more than 160 countries

• Covering a comprehensive product portfolio with more than 400 in-vitro

diagnostic products in 12 segments

Interesting facts

about the 50-year

history of HUMAN,

its milestones and

product highlights

as well as voices and insights of our

cooperation partners can be found

on our anniversary page at

https://www.human.de/abouthuman/50-years-human/

Discover the comprehensive

product portfolio at

https://www.human.de/products/

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56 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Covid-19 forced the faster adoption of

innovation by healthcare systems, which

needed quick solutions to address increased hospital admissions and limited

staff and resources. Innovations which

would have otherwise taken a decade to

adopt were rolled out in months.

New medical technology (MedTech)

will play a vital role in years to come,

helping healthcare systems tackle issues

caused by Covid, such as the backlog of

patients awaiting surgery. There are some

clear trends likely to emerge in healthcare

during 2023 and these pose important

considerations for the MedTech industry.

Balancing telemedicine solutions

The pandemic triggered an increase in

telemedicine solutions, with consultations

largely moved to virtual platforms. This

helped healthcare professionals remain

safe but impacted healthcare delivery as

many conditions simply cannot be identified via video or phone calls. Healthcare

systems have realised that some patients

struggle to get appointments or become

frustrated with remote diagnostics.

2023 could mark the year that this trend

begins to reverse. Telemedicine and remote diagnostics will continue, but the future will focus on a hybrid model that balMedTech trends for 2023

MedTech

ances convenience with the patient need

for face-to-face meetings.

Hospital-to-home care

Remote monitoring devices and MedTech

that can be self-applied and managed at

home are likely to increase.

MedTech that allows patients to manage

their conditions remotely reduces the need

for frequent check-ups. The deployment of

clinical grade monitoring equipment has the

power to make care more efficient, providing

treatment to patients only when they need it.

Remote treatment will also increase, enabling hospital-to-home care to support overwhelmed front-line staff. Patients can address

issues in the home that previously would have

required a hospital visit. For patients experiencing delays in surgery, this can keep patients

comfortable while they await treatment.

New treatments

Healthcare services have traditionally been

slow to adopt new treatments. Medical innovation needs to demonstrate it delivers

better clinical outcomes to achieve adoption, but this requires time and funding.

With the development of the MedTech

industry, treatments can demonstrate real

patient benefits far quicker. MedTech solutions can speed up healing by double

or more and, in some cases, identify and

prevent conditions from developing altogether. The pandemic encouraged more

frictionless adoption of MedTech, which

will hopefully continue.

Driving sustainability

Healthcare will not be immune to the growing global climate crisis, and 2023 will see

an emphasis on sustainable solutions that

drive a more circular healthcare system.

MedTech companies are increasingly

challenged to demonstrate compliance

with high levels of sustainability as part

of them becoming a preferred supplier.

Clinicians will look to MedTech innovation which provide solutions that are

good for the planet – not just those that

do less harm.

Less supply chain vulnerability

The recent supply chain issues in China,

combined with the impact of the RussiaUkraine crisis, has demonstrated that an

uncertain world has global implications –

and the healthcare industry is no exception. Healthcare systems need to deliver

continuity of care in an unpredictable

world, particularly ensuring drugs and

MedTech solutions that help people heal

are always available.

Another key trend we can expect to see

in 2023 is that MedTech companies will be

required to prove that they can ensure continuity of supply in all circumstances.

By Bernard Ross

The author

Bernard Ross is CEO and founder of Sky Medical Technology (Sky).

Sky’s multi-award-winning device – the geko™ device – is a wristwatch-sized wearable applied to the knee delivering painless electrical

impulses to stimulate blood flow, without the patient having to move.

It has been globally adopted into healthcare systems to treat a range of

medical conditions such as the prevention of blood clots.

Ross is a serial entrepreneur with more than 20 years’ senior experience

at private and public board level across multiple industries.

P:60

58 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Arab Health has underscored its commitment to showcasing the latest advances

in healthcare technology and innovation with the launch of the Intelligent

Health Pavilion and the return of the Future Health Summit, which will explore

healthcare in the Metaverse.

Taking place at the Dubai World Trade

Centre from 30 January to 2 February

2023, Arab Health will host the Intelligent Health Pavilion in partnership with

the Intelligent Health Association and

provide visitors with the opportunity to

experience the most innovative and sustainable healthcare technologies.

Located in Arab Health’s Healthcare

Transformation sector, the Intelligent

Health Pavilion will feature three demonstration rooms showcasing several new

technologies through live demonstrations, including a groundbreaking digital

Intensive Care Unit, an intelligent Operating Room, and a revolutionary Emergency Room.

The new feature will also have a seminar theatre and provide a platform for exhibitors to reveal the latest cutting-edge

healthcare technology.

Ross Williams, Exhibition Director for

Informa Markets, said: “The healthcare industry has witnessed incredible changes in

recent years, with technology and innovation

The Metaverse set to feature

prominently at Arab Health

the driving force behind how the industry is

elevating patient care. These latest advancements are expected to increase further by

utilising the Metaverse and looking at how we

interact with technology to utilise artificial

intelligence (AI), augmented reality (AR)

and virtual reality (VR) to improve patient

outcomes.”

Future Health Summit

Doubling down on innovation and technology, Arab Health will also host the second edition of the Future Health Summit

at the Museum of the Future. The exclusive, fully immersive event will look into

the future of health and healthcare possibilities in the Metaverse. World-renowned

industry leaders, visionaries, metaverse

experts, authors, and futurists on the topic

will offer their insights.

According to a report titled Healthcare

in the Metaverse from Market Research Future, the healthcare metaverse market is

predicted to grow at a CAGR of 48.3% until 2030, with the industry’s value expected

to top US$5.37 billion.

“The Future Health Summit is dedicated to trailblazers. From AI and robotics to

the role of the Metaverse, the healthcare

industry is continuously evolving. A result

of cutting-edge technology combined with

innovative leaders committed to improving patient outcomes,” said Williams.

“The Metaverse is expected to disrupt

healthcare and open new channels of treatment while lowering costs. The predicted

growth within this market is huge, and we’ve

only explored the tip of the iceberg. The Future

Health Summit will provide an invaluable look

at how everyone in the healthcare industry can

maximise what it offers,” he added.

Innov8 Talks

Arab Health 2023 will also see the return

of popular start-up competition, Innov8

Talks, which will feature 24 companies

showcasing unique and innovative solutions. At the same time, the Transformation Talks and Start-Up Zone will also

explore the latest tech advancements from

global innovators and disruptors.

The event will be supported by a host of

government entities, including the UAE

Ministry of Health and Prevention, the

Government of Dubai, the Dubai Health

Authority, the Department of Health, and

the Dubai Healthcare City Authority.

Internal Medicine Conference

The growing prevalence of diabetes in the

UAE and the broader Middle East and North

Africa (MENA) region will be addressed by

world-renowned industry experts at the Internal Medicine Conference, which takes place

P:61

Arab Health 2023

from 30- 31 January as part of the 2023 Arab

Health Congress. The conference will have

dedicated sessions designed to bring together

stakeholders who are at the forefront of diabetes care and research. Sessions will include the

evolution of diabetes management moderated

by Dr Hamed Farooqi, Director and Consultant Endocrinologist, Dubai Diabetes Center,

Dubai Health Authority. Panellists include

Dr Saf Naqvi, Imperial College London Diabetes Centre, Abu Dhabi; Dr Saria Gouher,

American Hospital Dubai; and Dr Hammad

Hussain, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi. Topics to be addressed include the management

of diabetes, endocrinologists’ views on steroid

therapy and the severe complication of diabetes and diabetic ketoacidosis.

Exhibitors

The exhibition will feature over 3,000 exhibitor companies from 70 countries and include

nine product sectors, showcasing the latest

technology and innovations in disposables,

orthopaedics, healthcare and general services,

imaging, medical devices, IT, wellness and

prevention, and infrastructure and assets.

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 59

Due to exceptional demand, coupled

with the relaxing of Covid-19 travel

restrictions, exhibitor space at Medlab Middle East sold out two months

ahead of the show, which returns to the

Dubai World Trade Centre from 6-9

February. Medlab Middle East is the

MENA region’s largest medical laboratory exhibition and congress.

Medlab Middle East organiser, Informa Markets, noted that the number

of exhibition halls has increased from

four to six, compared to the 2022 event.

More than 350 new exhibitors have

been confirmed, taking the total number to over 700, with 180 countries represented. International pavilions have

also seen a rise from 11 to 14.

In line with the show’s theme: ‘Paving the way for technological advancements and sustainability in laboratory

medicine,’ a wide range of exhibitors

will be showcasing their latest products

in areas including disposables, imaging, IT systems, medical equipment,

amongst others.

Tom Coleman, Group Exhibition

Director, Informa Markets Healthcare,

said: “It has been an incredible year of

growth for the medical laboratory industry and Medlab Middle East. This

year we will welcome exhibitors from

180 countries, many of whom are making their debut at the event.

“We are also welcoming back several

of our Asian counterparts who have

been unable to travel due to restrictions in their home countries as well

as stalwarts of the event Abbott, Biomerieux, Beckman Coulter, Randox, illumina, bioMérieux, Randox and Mindray, amongst others.”

Hosted Buyer programme

In addition to a full line-up of exhibitors on the show floor, Medlab Middle

East has announced the launch of

its Hosted Buyer programme, which

will match exhibitors with senior

decision-makers from the healthcare industry. The show floor will

also include a series of seminars and

workshops designed to allow visitors

to learn first-hand about the latest

medical laboratory innovations from

exhibitors.

This year’s conference programme includes eight core lab conference tracks,

with a further four new additions addressing Point of Care Testing (POCT),

Tech Advances and Clinical Impact, New

trends in laboratory medicine, Quality

Management in the Lab, and Sustainability in the Lab.

The Village

In another first for the event, Medlab

Middle East will also showcase a new

Entertainment zone – The Village,

which will provide a more relaxed environment for networking, situated outside Za’abeel Hall 6.

MEDLAB sells out early

Middle East Health is a media

partner with the US and Canada

pavilions at Arab Health 2023.

Find out more about who is exhibiting at these pavilions and what

products they are showcasing.

Download the US and Canada

pavilions exhibitor news PDF by

scanning the QR code

or visiting this link:

https://bit.ly/3Ito5wb

United States and

Canada pavilions

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60 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

At Siemens Healthineers, we are striving

to overcome the most threatening diseases, improving the quality of outcomes,

and enabling access to care by pioneering breakthroughs in healthcare. We are

excited to share with you our vision and

mission at Arab Health exhibition from 30

Jan to 2 Feb 2023 at Dubai World Trade

Center in Dubai and to showcase our diverse products and solutions.

Visitors to our booth can look forward

to experiencing our latest innovations

across our comprehensive portfolio – from

in-vitro and in-vivo diagnostics to imageguided therapy and innovative cancer care,

presenting our solutions with special focus on the most threatening NCDs (noncommunicable diseases), stroke, coronary

artery disease, and cancer. Visitors will be

able to discover how advanced diagnostics

and therapy workflows can combine to create comprehensive and personalized care

and we will show our perspective on how

to leverage digitalization and automation at

scale to create a smart imaging value chain.

Attendees will be provided with a hybrid

event approach on our almost 300 sqm large

booth S1.D10 located in Sheikh Saeed Hall

1 for face-to-face exchange and live experiences, as well as through online events and

insights in our virtual environment Shape23.

Medical Imaging innovations

Siemens Healthineers will be showcasing

a vast range of the latest innovations and

state-of-the-art technologies to valued customers and conference attendees. One of

the highlights will be the world’s first photon-counting CT, the NAEOTOM Alpha

with Quantum Technology, representing

nothing less than the total reinvention of

Pioneering breakthroughs in healthcare to

overcome the world’s most threatening diseases

Siemens Healthineers

computed tomography, offering high-resolution images at minimal dose with spectral

information in every scan and improved

contrast at lower noise. The MAGNETOM

Free.Max, with its 80 cm bore, sets a new

paradigm in patient comfort, breaking barriers in expanding access to care in MRI.

Visitors will receive a first-hand experience of the MOBILETT Impact, providing a high-quality, mobile, and digital

X-ray solution to the patient’s bedside at

an economical price, enabling a fast and

undisrupted workflow. At the same time,

the intuitive and supportive user interface

allows even inexperienced staff to achieve

high-quality results. The Symbia Pro.

specta with myExam Companion sets new

standards in SPECT/CT, bringing your nuclear medicine department into the future.

The system includes intelligent SPECT/

CT imaging and a fully integrated user interface to give you the power of more.

Also, among our highlights will be the

ACUSON Sequoia Ultrasound System

powered by BioAcoustic technology,

which helps to deliver effective clinical

insights by reducing the effects of ultrasound variability between users, patients,

and technology. The medical imaging solutions are being complemented by a tailored and interdisciplinary IT infrastructure for imaging and reporting solutions.

Syngo Carbon, for example, is designed

to improve patient care by leveraging data

management and Artificial Intelligence,

integrated into a user-friendly workspace.

Laboratory diagnostics &

point-of-care testing

On the show floor, visitors will also be

able to gather detailed insights from our

experts on the booth on Siemens Healthineers’ latest advancements and broad

spectrum of immunoassay, chemistry, hematology, molecular, and urinalysis testing solutions, in conjunction with automation, informatics, and services to serve

the needs of laboratories of any size – today and tomorrow. In our point-of-care

section, attendees will be informed about

solutions providing immediate, convenient, and easy-to-use diagnostic testing,

including the latest innovations in blood

gas testing and cardiac care.

Value Partnerships and

Innovation Think Tank

We will discuss Value Partnerships and the

benefits that such long-term, performanceoriented, collaborative engagements provide

to healthcare institutions, their staff, and patients. Exemplary global and local case studies

will be featured on our Exhibit Globe, where

visitors will be informed on how Siemens

Healthineers is bringing a combination of

clinical insights, medical innovation, strategic

vision, and implementation expertise to the

advancement of healthcare.

In an exclusive VIP lounge, customers

and interested attendees will have a closer

look at one of our 3D Innovation Think

Tank models, showcasing how Siemens

Healthineers enables the creation of knowledge economies through self-sustainable local innovation infrastructures promoting

expertise development, capacity building,

and entrepreneurship at hospitals, universities, and governmental institutions.

ARAB HEALTH stand: S1.D10

Sheikh Saeed Hall 1

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62 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

The Stanford Medicine Online Second

Opinion Program provides access to expertise that can inform patients’ most important care decisions. The programme allows

them to connect with world-class doctors

without leaving home. Patients create an

account, and Stanford Medicine doctors

review their medical records, imaging, and

test results before sending personalized

treatment recommendations.

Stanford Medicine’s clinical networks,

Precision Health approach, and unique

position as an academic medical centre in

the heart of Silicon Valley enable personal

patient care by bridging

medicine and technology.

Wherever patients are in

the world, the Stanford

Medicine Online Second

Opinion Program puts

world-class care within

reach. Patients with a diagnosis gain access not only

to expert second opinions

from renowned Stanford

Medicine doctors but also

to peace of mind when they

need to make crucial decisions about care.

For second opinions on

adult cases, Stanford Medicine specialties include ear, nose, and throat; cancer;

cardiovascular health; neurology; neurosurgery; orthopaedics; ophthalmology;

transplant, and more. For second opinions

on paediatric cases, specialties include ear,

nose, and throat; cardiothoracic surgery;

orthopaedics; heart failure/heart transplantation; epilepsy, and more.

Stanford Medicine’s reputation

for excellence

In adult care, Stanford Health Care is

among the top 10 hospitals in the U.S.,

according to the U.S. News & World Report’s 2022-2023 Best Hospitals rankings.

Stanford Health Care’s strong showing

Stanford Medicine experts

offer second opinions online

Stanford Medicine

reflects its expertise in numerous specialties and complex procedures. It was recognized as No. 1 in the U.S. for ear, nose,

and throat, and it earned top-10 rankings

for cardiology and heart surgery as well as

obstetrics and gynaecology. The hospital

also ranked among the nation’s best for the

following specialties: cancer, diabetes and

endocrinology; gastroenterology and gastrointestinal surgery; geriatrics; neurology

and neurosurgery; orthopaedics; pulmonology and lung surgery; and urology.

In paediatric care, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, part of Stanford

Medicine Children’s Health, has been

named among the top 10 children’s hospitals in the U.S., according to the U.S. News

& World Report 2022–23 Best Children’s

Hospitals survey. For the seventh consecutive year, the hospital has achieved rankings

in all 10 paediatric specialties. The 2022

survey ranked four of the hospital’s specialties in the top 10, including two in the top

five nationwide. These include nephrology,

pulmonology and lung surgery, neonatology, and neurology and neurosurgery.

Supporting both paediatric and adult

care, Stanford Cancer Institute is designated a Comprehensive Cancer Center

by the National Cancer Institute, a part

of the National Institutes of Health and

the world’s leading cancer research organization. Stanford Cancer Institute

quickly translates discoveries into improved diagnostics and safer, more effective

therapeutics.

Serving international patients

and medical professionals

After receiving an online second opinion,

patients who desire further follow-up may

receive high-touch navigation support from

specialists in the International Medical

Services (IMS) department. It welcomes

patients from around the world by providing individualized, and

culturally competent services 24/7 year-round. The

seasoned team assists with

identifying and scheduling appointments with the

right physicians for each

patient; interpretation and

translation services for patients, family members,

and caregivers; handling

billing and insurance; and

helping plan their visits

among other services.

Stanford Medicine is

committed to advancing

human health globally by leading innovation in research, education, and clinical care.

Educational opportunities for international

physicians, including clinical observerships

and hospital campus visits and tours, can be

arranged by the IMS department as well.

• For more information about our online

second opinion programme for adults

(age 18 and older),

visit: stanfordhealthcare.org/2ndopinion

• For paediatric online second opinions

(under age 17),

visit: secondopinion.stanfordchildrens.org

• To learn more about the International

Medical Services department,

contact: [email protected]

P:66

RoboPharma

64 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Pharmacies that are in high-expansion

mode today may be considering two likely

paths for optimum business growth and

customer satisfaction and compliance:

• Modernize and fully automate 100%

of the existing central filling process, or

• Expand into mail order/digital pharmacy

In either case, RoboPharma is your bestchoice partner. RoboPharma is the fastest

growing pharmacy automation provider in

the Middle East and Europe. Our unique designs deliver Speed, Efficiency, and Reliability

– whether your pharmacy needs to dispense

1,000 to 100,000+ prescriptions per shift.

Customized automation

Our designs are 100% customized so they are

adapted to your available space, workflow,

budget and business growth plans. This is an

essential part of the RoboPharma process and

it ensures your long-term success. With a deep

understanding of your challenges, medication

formulary, patient population, and local regulations, we set you up for success from your golive date and for years to follow. Even when

expansion is needed, RoboPharma technology is modular and grows with your volume

– without the need for knocking down walls

or building new!

High volume application specialist

Our “hub and spoke” approach is proven

to be the most efficient method to handle

a heavy flow of data and medication without missing a single step. Whether patient

RoboPharma revolutionizes

pharmacies’ high-volume central

filling and mail order solutions

orders are originated in their local pharmacy or online, the next steps are all orchestrated flawlessly by RoboPharma.

• Central Filling model: RoboPharma

designs your end-to-end system where patient orders are received from retail pharmacy branches, are completely processed

in your facility, then are shipped back to

the patient’s local pharmacy.

• Mail Order/Digital Pharmacy model:

RoboPharma designs your end-to-end system where orders are received from your

pharmacy’s website or app, are completely

processed in your facility, then are shipped

back to the patient’s home.

Sounds simple? Yes, we make it that

simple for you! Your project managers and

your pharmacy staff will find that RoboPharma’s ability to streamline an ultracomplex and interconnected environment

is our greatest skill.

Superior technology for bulk processing

RoboPharma’s design philosophy of “lessis-more” has been proven to reduce downtime, mechanical failures, and bottlenecks;

utilize less energy; lower operational costs;

and ultimately quicken your return on

investment. In every installation to date,

RoboPharma central filling and mail order

is proven to be superior in every way to

stand-alone classical pharmacy filling and

one-dimensional robotic picking.

Whether you are improving your existing flow or you are building new, RoboPharma is ready to partner with you to revolutionize your pharmacy’s business.

• For more information, visit: https://robopharma.com/solutions/central-fill/

Capsa’s Gulf Region Contact:

Tamer Bakkar

+971 555 570 664

[email protected]

ARAB HEALTH stand: SA.E60

P:67

Improving affordable access to modern medical care is one of the

world’s most pressing challenges and must be one of our biggest collective priorities. Some 8.4% of the global population lives in extreme poverty living on less than of US$ 2.15 a day according to

2022 World Bank estimates.

Abdul Latif Jameel Health is our response, with a focus on the

disparity in access between developed and developing nations, notably in the fast-growing economies of the ‘Global South’. Backed

by Abdul Latif Jameel, one of the region’s most respected diversified

family businesses and global investors, with over three quarters of

a century of commercial heritage and established networks across

30 countries, Abdul Latif Jameel Health is uniquely positioned as

a strong and trusted partner to address real-world healthcare needs

today, for a better tomorrow.

With a strong partnership ethos, Abdul Latif Jameel Health has confirmed its participation in Arab Health 2023, returning to the Dubai

World Trade Centre under the theme ‘Innovation and Sustainability in

Healthcare’. Easing of COVID-19 restrictions and a return to normality

will see the 48th Congress much larger – and busier – than the last two

years, with the UAE reaffirming its position as a global healthcare hub

with AED 2.8bn (US$ 763m) deals secured in 2022.

Abdul Latif Jameel Health will showcase a range of innovative, disruptive products from partners from as far afield as the USA and Japan,

including Butterfly, Melody, Holoeyes, and Cyberdyne, as it brings these

cutting edge technologies to the Middle East and Africa.

The Butterfly iQ+, the world’s first handheld, single probe, wholebody ultrasound solution, brings the power of ultrasound into assessment, diagnosis, and treatment processes.

Melody’s iCTG is a convenient, wearable, smart, and highly portable remote mobile foetal monitoring device to assist in problematic or high-risk pregnancies, enabling safer and more secure births

for both mother and infant.

Holoeyes’ extended reality surgical platform fuses technology, artificial

intelligence and medicine enabling physicians to share complex information intuitively and with greater understanding and transparency than

conventional 2D imaging techniques to plan intricate surgery and raise

educational understanding in training new medical professionals.

Cyberdyne will showcase its Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL) exoskeleton technology pioneering rehabilitative therapy.

Access to affordable health

These partnerships underscore Abdul Latif Jameel Health’s commitAbdul Latif Jameel

Health brings health

tech innovators

from around the

world to Arab

Health 2023

Abdul Latif Jameel Health

ment to adding real, tangible, value; not only to all our business

partner relationships, but also to the communities across the

Global South. In a year that saw the 8 billionth human being

born, addressing the issue of access affordable health care makes

Abdul Latif Jameel Health’s vision is more relevant than ever.

Akram Bouchenaki, CEO, Abdul Latif Jameel Health, said:

“To achieve success as a solutions partner, we work together

with world class and leading partners pioneering new technologies, techniques, and medicines; focusing on driving inclusivity

– we continue in our vision to accelerate access to affordable

modern medical care for more people, in more places, and to

meet the unmet need across the Global South.”

• For more information, visit: aljhealth.com.

Connect with the Abdul Latif Jameel Health team

and their partners at Arab Health, January 30 to

February 2, 2023, at the Dubai World Trade Centre.

ARAB HEALTH stand: S1.J10

*Disclaimer: Within the Middle East and depending on the specific country, Butterfly iQ+TM is a Class IIa/

Class B/ClassII/Class II/IIa portable ultrasound system designed for diagnostic imaging by trained healthcare

professionals. Carefully read and understand all cautions, warnings and operational instructions prior to use.

The Cyberdyne Hybrid Assistive Limb or HAL

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 65

P:68

66 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

People all over the world passionately pursue their dreams only if their health is assured. In this era of personalised and precision medicine, Neusoft Medical Systems

provides intelligent technology that can be

applied to medical devices to enable medical professionals to make medical examinations easier and more efficient. This technology helps to satisfy customers’ diversified

needs and bring care to more patients.

Here we will introduce two AI technologies that can be applied to our CT scanners. Both are currently works in progress.

ClearInfinity reduces noise and

artifacts for better image clarity

ClearInfinity is a Deep Learning Reconstruction (DLR) technique that uses a network of multi-layer neurons preformed and

trained to become more accurate and more

efficient. It removes artifacts and provide

natural images with sharper edges and reduced noise. This provides gains in resolution and improvement in clinical performance foreshowing its utility for routine

clinical practice.

Using ClearInfinity for low dose

coronary CT angiography

The number of streaks is very important in

MPR planes for cardiac images, in particular in the axial plane. For FBP images, conEnabling precision medicine

with advanced technology

Neusoft Medical Systems

tours of hollow and solid organs all have

streaks of contours and too much noise,

therefore, spatial resolution in the axial

MPR plane is seriously reduced. However,

the ClearInfinity technology significantly

decreases streak artifacts and reduces noise

to deliver a natural and sharper low-dose

coronary CTA.

Virtual Reality and vessel analysis are promising tools for diagnosis in cardiology and,

combined with ClearInfinity, this promises to

provide significant improvements in accuracy

and efficiency, thereby decreasing variability

in image interpretation.

A-Eye – a smart system

for patient positioning

Neusoft Medical Systems has developed

the A-Eye smart patient positioning system in order to improve the current scanning operation process and reduce the

workload of doctors. Intelligent and accurate positioning can be realized by oneclick operation with new smart cameras.

Its main features are:

1. Automatic positioning

Doctors can select the scanning protocol

with one click in the operating room with

no need to position the patient in the

scanning room. The A-Eye intelligent

positioning system, with innovative AI

technology, can accurately identify the

feature points of the body, automatically

move the scanning table to the initial position of scanning and press the exposure

button to realize image positioning and

scanning, thus helping achieve the realization of automatic positioning and oneclick efficient workflow.

2. Standardized workflow

Compared to traditional positioning,

Neusoft’s automatic positioning is faster

and more efficient, which, to a large extent, reduces errors by manual operation.

Meanwhile, the camera, with automatic

calibration function, can calibrate the

camera parameters without manual adjustment, which ensures the accuracy of

each scan.

3. Non-contact workflow

The intelligent positioning system avoids

direct doctor-patient contact which is particularly useful during epidemics. In other

words, doctors can do remote patient positioning, real-time monitoring and scanning

of the patient.

Visit: www.neusoftmedical.com/en

ARAB HEALTH stand: S1.D30

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 67

Cedars-Sinai is truly honored to be named

the No. 2 hospital in the USA on U.S.

News & World Report’s Best Hospitals

Honor Roll. We’re also proud to be

ranked among the best in the USA in the

following 11 specialties: Gastroenterology

and GI Surgery; Cardiology & Heart

Surgery; Ear, Nose & Throat; Orthopedics;

Pulmonology and Lung Surgery; Urology;

Neurology and Neurosurgery; Geriatrics;

Cancer; Diabetes & Endocrinology; and

Obstetrics and Gynecology.

In addition, we’ve been named the No. 1

hospital in California and No.1 in five specialties in California–Cardiology and Heart

Surgery, Gastroenterology and GI Surgery,

Orthopedics, Pulmonology and Lung Surgery, and Urology. Our Neurology & Neurosurgery specialty has also been ranked No.

1 in the Los Angeles region.

The U.S News rankings are based on

patient outcomes, patient experience,

technology, reputation (according to surveyed physicians) and a variety of other

health-related measures. They reflect

the tireless commitment of all those who

work and practice at Cedars-Sinai to deliver the highest-quality patient care, especially during the challenging times of

the COVID-19 pandemic.

Located in West Los Angeles, California, in the beautiful neighborhood of BevCedars-Sinai

erly Hills, Cedars-Sinai is part of a diverse

and lively city, known for its art, culture,

music, sporting events, cultural landmarks

and warm weather.

Every year, thousands of patients from

around the globe receive treatment at

Cedars-Sinai. We offer new treatments,

surgeries and clinical trials that are only

available at a few hospitals in the U.S. We

treat each patient with an individualized

treatment plan. Patients at Cedars-Sinai

can expect the best available care, a personal approach, and the newest diagnostics and treatment options.

“Thanks to the dedication of our physicians, nurses, academic leaders and thousands of others on our staff, Cedars-Sinai

continues to provide innovative healthcare, enhanced by our commitment to pioneering research, teaching and education,”

said Thomas M. Priselac, president and

CEO of Cedars-Sinai Health System. “We

are proud of Cedars-Sinai’s contributions

to our diverse Los Angeles community as

well as nationally and globally.”

International patients

As part of this commitment to our global

community, Cedars-Sinai International has a

dedicated patient-services team that speaks

multiple languages and focuses specifically

on helping our international patients. We

• Follow us on at: Cedars-Sinai International

• Learn more about Cedars-Sinai at: cedars-sinai.org/international

Cedars-Sinai

proud to be

No. 2 hospital

in the USA

provide a range of concierge services to

meet the unique needs of patients traveling

from outside the U.S. to receive world-class

care and treatment at Cedars-Sinai.

Our global-services team leverages the

clinical and nonclinical excellence at

Cedars-Sinai to provide a full spectrum of

advisory and consulting services that help

our partners around the world achieve their

strategic goals and thrive in today’s everchanging healthcare environment.

“Today, we care for patients from over

100 countries. Our top areas are heart and

cancer, as well as neurological diseases, orthopaedics, gastrointestinal diseases, transplant surgery and women’s health,” said

Heitham Hassoun, MD, vice president and

medical director of Cedars-Sinai International. “Whether through receiving care at

our state-of-the-art facilities in Los Angeles or through remote second opinions and

teleconsultations, we want international

patients to benefit from our services wherever they live.”

Cedars-Sinai would like to thank our

staff for earning this global recognition.

They are true leaders within their fields,

and their innovation and compassion are

unparalleled. We’re so grateful to each and

every one of them for sharing their expertise and always keeping our patients’ wellbeing as their top priority.

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68 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

The effectiveness of strength training depends on many small, key elements: the

correct load, the adequate number of repetitions, the recovery time, the speed of execution of the exercise, the posture, the range of

motion. Optimising every single detail and

preventing the most common errors is fundamental to making your training effective

and achieving better results in less time.

Biostrength, the new Technogym line

for strength training, adapts to you, thanks

to a patented technology that uses artificial intelligence and scientific research,

and ensures you get 30% better results

in the same amount of time compared to

classic training with equipment or free

weights. Biostrength allows you to train

with the right load, range of motion, correct posture, speed of execution and even

indicates the number of sets, repetitions

and optimal recovery times.

The patented Biodrive system, which

uses aerospace technology, offers you 6

types of resistance, which can improve the

effectiveness of your exercise depending

on the goal you want to achieve. You are

guided through every aspect of the workout to achieve maximum results in a safe

and effective way: Biodrive recognises

when you are too tired and the spotter

function automatically reduces the load

to allow you to complete the set, while,

to keep you motivated and encourage you

to improve, Biostrength gives you reward

badges as you achieve new goals.

A connected experience

Biostrength is a digital and connected experience with an unprecedented variety of training programs and content. With a simple login to the Technogym Ecosystem, Biostrength

equipment allows you to select the workout

experience that best suits the results you want

to achieve from goal-oriented programs, to

custom programs or free training.

Technogym Biostrength

The revolution in strength training

The first strength training solution that adapts to you and

guarantees 30% superior results in the same amount of time

Technogym

The 4 target programs include:

• HYPERTROPY: to develop muscle

mass. This program increases the load in

the eccentric phase of the movement,

while the muscle fibres lengthen, in a way

that is functional for developing mass.

• POWER: to train like an athlete.

The use of a resistance without inertia allows you to train explosive strength and to

express maximum force in complete safety.

• STRONG: to increase your strength. The

viscous resistance that makes the exercise more

intense as the speed of execution increases.

• TONE: get more muscle tone with

less effort. Elastic resistance and a gradual

increase in the workload allow you to improve muscle tone constantly throughout

the entire range of movement.

If you are a more advanced user and

would like to optimise every single exercise in your training program, the CUSTOM function will offer you various training techniques, such as drop sets, pyramids

and single set tone express.

If you already know what to do and want

to set up your own program, with the FREE

TRAINING mode you can train quickly

and easily, without logging in, simply by adjusting your session and selecting the workload and number of repetitions you want.

Biostrength represents a great opportunity for fitness clubs and personal trainers

to increase the value of their membership

by offering their clients innovative programs that guarantee the desired results.

Thanks to Mywellness, Technogym’s professional software platform, they can assign each user a tailor-made program optimised to individual goals; with a simple

log-in the user will be fully guided by Biostrength in the optimal execution of the

exercise.

n Technogym is available at the Technogym Experience Centre in Dubai.

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With the emergency monitor and defibrillator DEFIGARD Touch 7

and the mechanical CPR device EASY PULSE, rescue teams are ideally

equipped for any situation.

The Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) crew member

Samuel Ernst from the Swiss helicopter rescue service AAA Alpine Air

Ambulance confirms: “For us as HEMS, after dropping off or getting out

of the helicopter, it is crucial to reach the patient as quickly as possible

and to carry as little weight as possible. Both devices are extremely lightweight and user friendly, and with its harness system, the EASY PULSE

is attached to the patient easily and efficiently.”

Important advantages

EASY PULSE, the mechanical CPR device, is ideal for confined

spaces, for example in helicopters, aircraft, ambulances and on rescue sites such as in crashed cars or after earthquakes. It is possible to

operate the device on patients in a head-up position.

DEFIGARD Touch 7 is a compact and lightweight monitor/defibrillator, which is extremely intuitive to use and equipped with high-end data

transmission technology.

FRED easyport plus is a small and lightweight defibrillator, available as fully automated, semi-automatic or manual version. A 1-2-3

workflow, the large colour screen and the spoken instructions make

it very easy to use.

DEFIGARD HD-7 is SCHILLER’s latest hospital defibrillator

which minimizes the time to shock thanks to fast analysis and parallel charging. A shock can be delivered with paddles, defibrillation

pads or spoons. The device works with SCHILLERs unique data

management solution SEMA. Touchscreen, CPR feedback options

or cybersecurity are only some of the device’s convincing advantages.

Around the world with 1200 employees

SCHILLER was founded in 1974 by Alfred E. Schiller. Starting in

a four-room flat as a one-man business, the company has become a

Swiss HEMS

save lives with

SCHILLER

rescue devices

SCHILLER

successful group with more than 1200 employees, 30 subsidiaries

and a global sales network. Today, SCHILLER is a world-leading

manufacturer and supplier of devices for cardio-pulmonary diagnostics, rescue and patient monitoring as well as software solutions for the medical industry.

n For more information, visit: www.schiller.ch

For almost five decades, SCHILLER has been

committed to fighting sudden cardiac death.

In the rescue product range, SCHILLER has

specialized in lightweight and small devices

for professionals and lay rescuers.

SCHILLER rescue devices are powerful, intuitive, lightweight, and

ideal for confined spaces, for example in helicopters.

The SCHILLER rescue devices EASY PULSE and DEFIGARD

Touch 7 support rescue services in any situation.

Extremely small and powerful: The defibrillator FRED easyport plus,

available in fully automated, semi-automatic or manual version.

70 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Email: [email protected]

ARAB HEALTH stand: S3.D10

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For the first time, Cone Beam technology

is applied to all areas of the body, including

the spine, shoulder, and hip thanks to one

of NewTom’s latest high-tech devices.

NewTom 7G brings cutting-edge Cone

Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT)

into all-new application fields. Equipped

with an extremely high-performance Xray generator (up to 120 kV and 120 mA)

and independent selection of the focal

spot (0.3 or 0.6 millimetres), this device

lets users perform accurate bone tissue examinations at a resolution of up to 90 μm,

ensuring ultra-precise analysis of even very

small complex structures such as those of

the inner ear.

The ability to perform exams quickly in

“low dose” mode – with the acquisition of

the desired anatomical area in just seven

seconds – is particularly convenient.

NewTom 7G can be used to investigate

innumerable anatomical areas in a wide

range of clinical applications, both in 3D

with numerous fields-of-view (FOVs) and

in 2D (also sequentially). Users can acquire

ultra-high definition images to diagnose the

micro-structures of the ear or hairline fracNewTom 7G – the world’s first

multi-scan body Cone Beam CT

NewTom

tures in complex joints, for example.

NewTom 7G features automations that

streamline workflow and limit the distortion

inherent in manual procedures, thus ensuring

the best results in the shortest time.

One of the most recent additions is for

hip examinations. Developed to acquire

bilateral hip images, the NewTom 7G can

capture a 40 x 17cm FOV. The horizontally extended FOV allows comparative

assessment of hip bones via reconstruction

into a single volume.

Pioneering Cone Beam technologies in

the dental sector

A global benchmark in the field of diagnostic imaging technologies, NewTom was

the first company to introduce Cone Beam

technology into the dental sector and now

offers a vast array of clinical solutions for

medical, dental, and veterinary diagnostics.

This trusted brand delivers state-of-theart equipment and provides professional

support and service around the globe.

Since the brand was created 25 years

ago, NewTom has extended the boundaries

of medical imaging, introducing the most

advanced diagnostic devices capable of

micrometric, ultra-high-resolution detail

of bone structure, covering all anatomical

areas, from head and neck examinations

to ENT, MSK for orthopaedics, as well as

dental maxillofacial radiology.

In each area, NewTom has led the field,

innovating through technology and driving scientific trends. Patented algorithms,

advanced functions for both 2D and 3D

imaging, as well as a host of features devoted to reducing the effective dose,

thereby safeguarding the health of operators and patients alike, are just a part of

the innovations achieved through NewTom’s constant commitment to technological excellence.

• NewTom devices are supported by powerful DICOM 3.0 compatible NNT

software, which can interface with third-party systems and software to store and

exchange medical data.

• To learn more for yourself, visit www.newtom.it/en

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72 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

CONSIS robotic dispensers offer a tailormade and highly efficient automation concept for your dispensary. With CONSIS you

will be able to automate more than 90% of

your daily dispensed products on a footprint

starting from only 0.8 sqm. The CONSIS

software interfaces with all major dispensary software. The design is available in a

range of colours to suit your pharmacy.

FAMA drawer system is a customized solution, so that all products in your dispensary are organized in a compact, efficient

and professional manner. FAMA neatly

stores all medication in your dispensary,

script ready, scripts on file and excess stock.

FAMA round shelves combine high

density storage with optimum product visibility and easy access. Due to a patented

magnetic mechanism, filling is done quickly. Trays do not have to be pulled out to

replenish stock ensuring a safe and convenient replenishing process.

FAMA shelves are a modular system

that can be configured to your individual

needs and requirements. Pull out trays

easily store up to 1500 packages using the

FIFO (First in – First out) principle. Support rails hold plastic bins for particular

patient medication.

The answer to pharmacy

automation: CONSIS solutions for

hospital outpatient pharmacies

Increasing healthcare expenditure is driving the demand for pharmacy automation

in the region in order to provide improved

service to a large patient base. Pharmacy

staff require modern technology tools to

perform their jobs efficiently without losing on patient safety or care quality.

Hospital Outpatient Pharmacies busy

with dispensing prescriptions find it challenging to focus on additional revenue

Change your workflow with smart

dispensary solutions from Willach

Pharmacy Solutions

Willach Pharmacy Solutions

streams and so Pharmacy Automation is

attractive in order to improve the speed,

space and accuracy of dispensing.

Medication dispensing and patient consultation take time and where efficiency

is critical to maximize the potential of

this revenue-generating department, rush

mode can mean finding yourself with costly, even dangerous, errors on your hands.

Pharmacy automation allows the pharmacy staff to improve customer service, reduce dispensing errors and workloads, and

add a higher level of security, tracking and

accountability.

The key benefits of Pharmacy automation:

• Speeding up the dispensing process

• Cutting down on dispensing errors

• Saving space on product storage, creating more room for retail space or consultation facilities.

Pharmacy automation advice

Willach Pharmacy Solutions can offer

pharmacy automation advice and support

within your own business.

All key benefits are covered by the

CONSIS robots – the fast and reliable

principle capable of providing automation

over a long period of time with its parallel

ejection from several storage channels.

Reference projects

Reference projects in MENA include:

• John Hopkins ARAMCO Hospitals

(Al Khobar and Al Hasa, in Saudi Arabia)

• Jaber Al Ahmad MoH Hospital in Kuwait

The solutions that use CONSIS robots

and FAMA storage and dispensing systems have a reliable dispensing volume of

at least 10,000 packages / day for many

years.

Willach Pharmacy Solutions has a network of reliable partners in the Middle

East to provide a wide range of solutions

for the dispensing and storage area in hospital and community pharmacies.

• For more information, visit: www.willach-pharmacy-solutions.com/ME/ ARAB HEALTH stand: Z3.B19

P:75

Diabetes.co.uk estimates that 415 million people in the world live with

diabetes, with this figure expected to rise to 642 million by 2040.

Not only can diabetes be a debilitating condition, but it is also

a significant indicator and risk factor in the development of Peripheral Arterial Disease. However, due to calcification of arteries that occurs as part of the disease process in diabetic patients,

particularly around the ankle, normal ABI measurements can be

misleading, making it difficult to diagnose Peripheral Arterial

Disease or assess lower limb wound aetiology.

Huntleigh have developed a comprehensive diabetic foot assessment kit that gives diabetic specialists everything they need

to make an assessment of arterial disease and peripheral diabetic

neuropathy. International guidelines such as the International

Working Group for the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) indicate the use

of pulse waveform analysis and/or toe pressure assessment instead

of using potentially inaccurate ankle pressure readings. The kit

also allows clinicians to take pressure from the toe to determine

both the TBI (toe brachial index) and individual toe pressures.

It features a DMX digital Doppler with probe to provide an

aural and visual confirmation of blood flow. PPG (photoplethysmography) and waveforms can be read along with the compatible Dopplex Vascular Reporter package for waveform visualisation as well as for reviewing, archiving and printing.

Toe pressure is taken using the specially designed PPG probe

and adaptor, which links the toe cuff, the PPG sensor and sphyg.

This allows the Doppler to not only display a PPG waveform on

screen, but also a visual aid to guide clinicians on the optimal

deflation rate to ensure a more accurate reading. The Doppler

can also automatically identify systolic pressure,

Additionally to facilitate the assessment of peripheral diabetic

neuropathy, the kit also comes with a box of monofilaments, as well

as a Neuropen to deliver a more controlled level of pressure.

Huntleigh introduces

the complete diabetic

foot assessment kit

Huntleigh

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 73

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74 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Mobile workstations play an important

supporting role in the delivery of patient

care. Clinicians spend a large percentage

of time on patient documentation, medication administration and care coordination, all requiring the use of their workstation. The right mobile workstation

helps caregivers simplify workflow and

save critical steps by carrying what they

need most often to deliver patient care.

They enable clinicians to easily access

electronic medical records while remaining close to and interacting directly with

their patients.

The TrioTM Computing Workstation is

Capsa Healthcare’s latest advancement in

mobile workstations and a clinician’s most

reliable partner in patient care. Trio combines innovative advancements with flexibility to meet the needs of clinical users

today, and into the future.

Ease-of-use

Trio is personally adjustable for optimal user

comfort including height adjustments and

‘memory’ presets that are stored in a user’s profile and transfer to any cart the user logs into.

Trio features tools that streamline workflow, save time, and support an efficient

clinical process. An intuitive control cenCapsa Healthcare

ter with touchscreen shortcuts helps users

to easily control their cart.

Adaptable

Trio can be configured with storage and accessories to fit a wide range of care applications.

It’s easily adaptable to support simple documentation, medication administration, phlebotomy, telehealth, or registration workflows.

Trio supports a variety of storage options including standard bins or the new MaxBin™

system. Both are fully configurable and provide ample, secure storage capacity.

Reliable

A clinician’s focus is providing patient

care, not worrying whether a workstation

will run out of power during a shift. The

flexible, scalable GoLiFeTM Power System incorporates both internal and external battery options to meet varying runtime requirements. Trio provides a reliable

battery system with extended runtimes to

power clinicians through their day.

Remote fleet management

Trio features N-Sight Fleet Management

software, which makes it easy for IT to

proactively manage, maintain, and update

workstations remotely. N-Sight helps fa-

• For more information, visit:

https://www.capsahealthcare.com/product/trio-computing-workstations/

cilities improve asset utilization, maximize

fleet performance, and prevent issues before they impact clinical workflow.

Whether your facility is expanding its existing fleet or planning to replace older workstations, Capsa Healthcare is ready to help you

select a solution that enables your facility to

deliver the highest level of care.

Trio Computing Workstation

optimizes caregiver workflow

and enhances patient care

Capsa’s MEA region contact:

Fadi Saleh

Tel: +96 279 000 1133

[email protected]

ARAB HEALTH stand: SA.E60

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The GOSH team has

the world’s most

extensive experience

of slide tracheoplasty,

managing close to

75% of all cases

of complex airway

repairs worldwide.

76 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Recently recognised by Newsweek as one of

top three paediatric hospitals in the world,

Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH)

is a globally renowned children’s hospital,

championing innovation across more than

60 clinical specialties and 19 highly specialised national services.

The GOSH tracheal service comprises a

group of leading health professionals who

have been brought together to provide a

range of expertise. The tracheal team specialises in managing children with complex

congenital and/or acquired tracheal defects

including stenosis, malacia and other rare

congenital disorders of tracheobronchial

tree. The team consist of specialists including cardiothoracic surgeons, ENT surgeons,

interventional radiologists, pulmonologists,

intensive care specialists, speech and language therapists and physiotherapists.

Since it was formed in 2000, the tracheal service has become one of the largest

and most successful services in Europe and

a world leader in the field.

The surgical technique the team use

to treat tracheal stenosis is slide tracheoplasty. The GOSH team has the world’s

most extensive experience of this type of

surgery, managing close to 75% of all cases

of complex airway repairs worldwide each

year and this is reflected in the published

outcomes, with the lowest death rates for

this serious condition.

Between 1995 and the end of 2021,

a total of 210 slide tracheoplasty procedures were been performed at GOSH,

with an overall survival of 92% and the

most recent weighted survival (recent

experience in the last 5 years) of 96%.

There has been an increasing number of

slide tracheoplasties and a significant improvement in survival over time despite

increasing patient complexity.

Great Ormond Street Hospital:

Managing children with complex

congenital tracheal defects

Great Ormond Street Hospital

Other complex airway reconstructions

of increasing nature include reconstruction of trachea following injury (specifically related to button battery related injuries) and on those with failed repair of

trachea-oesophageal fistula. In both these

conditions, the technique used is one of

vascularised pericardial patch for tracheal

reconstruction. The GOSH surgical team

has revolutionised the use of this vascularised patch for trachea in many of the complex airway defects – with experience on

this being close to 75 children. The overall

success rate in this is 98% with stent needed in one-third of these children.

For those children with tracheomalacia

– both open and thoracoscopic aortopexy

and posterior tracheopexy is offered. External splints are often used as support to the

trachea in resistant situations and work is

in progress to get the most bio-effective

external splints for this.

Want to know more about Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH)

in London and our office in UAE?

We have been helping children overcome rare and complex conditions ever

since we opened our doors in 1852. Stronger than ever, our team is made up of

300 exceptional and dedicated consultants across more than 60 specialties. We

are a driving force in medical technology and research so we can provide much

needed treatment for children across the world.

Our International and Private Care service supports more than 5,000 children

from over 80 countries every year. We have a compassionate and multi-lingual

team to help our international patients and their families feel at home.

GOSH has a longstanding relationship with the Middle East providing high

quality and safe care for patients in a family-centred environment. A dedicated

Gulf office ensures that children and families being referred to the hospital receive the very best experience possible as well as providing a local point of contact. The unit is tailored to the referral and treatment of international patients

with a dedicated, multi-lingual team ensuring a smooth and efficient patient

experience.

• You can email us on: [email protected]

Call us: +971 4 362 4722

Or visit: www.gosh.ae

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Malaysia’s medical devices industry comprise more than 250 manufacturers of

which 30 are multinationals that have

made Malaysia their manufacturing base.

In addition to producing rubber gloves, the

industry also produces higher value-added

and technologically advanced products

such as cardiac pacemakers, stents, orthopaedic implantable devices, ophthalmic

lenses including contact lenses, dental instruments and appliances, and electromedical, therapeutic and monitoring devices.

Malaysia’s exports of medical devices were

valued at US$10 billion in 2021.

Medical Devices from Malaysia

Malaysia has the largest medical devices

industry within the ASEAN region with

an estimated market size of US$1.8 billion

and is the preferred offshore manufacturing site for global medtech companies.

“Malaysia is the preferred outsourcing

destination and medical device manufacturing hub within the ASEAN thanks to

strong support from the government to

develop this industry. Malaysia’s position

is further reinforced with the existence of

world class supporting infrastructure such

as sterilisation services, precision engineering, contract moulding and assembly, machinery fabrication, universities,

research and training institutes as well as

testing and accreditation bodies” said Mr.

Megat Iskandar – Trade Commissioner of

Malaysia to the UAE.

Malaysia at the Arab Health

Malaysia considers the gulf region as a major market for pharmaceutical and medical

equipment due each government’s commitment to provide quality healthcare to its

growing population. Companies participating under the Malaysia pavilion this year are

mainly manufacturers of syringes, haemodialysis concentrates, irrigation solutions and

other hospital consumables, rubber products,

stem cells for hospital and research, laboratory equipment, facility and asset management services for hospital among others. This

is Malaysia’s 19th year participating in the

event, which shows our strong commitment

to this market, added Megat.

Bilateral trade between the UAE

and Malaysia

Despite the challenges and uncertainties

around the world, Malaysia is optimistic

for 2023 with the global economy opening

up after the pandemic. “Already we have

seen a 41.2% growth in our exports to the

UAE during the first 11 months of 2022

compared to the same period in 2021. Malaysia’s total trade with UAE during this

period registered at US$8.06 billion. We

foresee bilateral trade between Malaysia

and the UAE will further improve with

the easing of travel restrictions in both

countries” said Megat.

Malaysian Companies to make a

Strong Presence in Arab Health

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Atrium Health’s Carolinas

Rehabilitation fortifies partnership

with Qatar Rehabilitation Institute

Atrium Health

78 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

the quality of their services; demonstrate

and value operational efficiency to payors;

and meet internationally recognized programme standards.

In 2010, CR started a unique informationsharing platform, EQUADRsm (Exchanged

Quality Data for Rehabilitation), which enables participants to share information, ideas

and best practices. EQUADRsm was the first

rehab specific quality AHRQ-listed (Agency

for Healthcare Quality & Research) patient

safety organization in the world.

Carolinas Rehabilitation is an integral

part of Atrium Health, a large healthcare

system with more than 70,000 clinical

and administrative employees servicing

patients at 40 hospitals and more than

1,400 care locations, with several nationally recognized facilities including

Carolinas Medical Center, Levine Children’s Hospital, Levine Cancer Institute

and Sanger Heart & Vascular Institute,

among others.

New $100M hospital to open

In January, CR will cut the ribbon on a new

US$100 million hospital occupying 160,000

square feet. The new facility will have 72

private rooms, offer extensive outpatient services and feature many new amenities.

Vishwa Raj MD, CR’s vice chair for Clinical Operations, says CR has always benefited

greatly by being part of a fully integrated

healthcare system. “We share a common goal

– for patients to receive the right care

at the right time. By working together,

we are effectively helping each other

improve in all aspects of care delivery.”

The future of rehabilitative care

Diane Lynn, head of Global Healthcare Services at Atrium Health,

agrees that the future of rehabilitative care

lies in integrated services. “Being part of a

larger system is a transformative way to do

business,” she says. “This was a big reason

QRI sought out a partnership with us, to

stay ahead of future trends.” CR is doing

everything possible to support QRI’s ambition to be a destination hospital for patients

throughout the Middle East. “For our part,

we’re thrilled to be in a position to help.”

CR has been ranked as a Top 20 Rehabilitation Hospital by U.S. News & World

Report for the last two years. Many of

Atrium Health’s other component hospitals and programmes routinely achieve

top national rankings from U.S. News &

World Report and other rating agencies.

“Our people enjoy being involved internationally,” Lynn says, “and the benefits of these arrangements flow in both

directions. We’ve learned a great deal by

working with QRI, and we look forward to

initiating other successful partnerships in

the future.”

Atrium Health’s Carolinas Rehabilitation

(CR), of Charlotte, North Carolina, ratified a new partnership with the Qatar Rehabilitation Institute (QRI) in Doha earlier

this year. QRI is the region’s largest tertiary

rehabilitation hospital and is part of the

Hamad Medical Corp. (HMC), the principal public healthcare provider in Qatar.

According to QRI’s chief medical director and Chairman of the Geriatric and

Long-Term Care Department at HMC, Hanadi Al-Hamad, MD, the institute had several compelling reasons for seeking a new

arrangement with a leading rehabilitation hospital in the U.S.

“First and foremost, we wanted to

enhance the quality of clinical care

for our patients,” Dr Al-Hamad says.

“We take pride in providing services

based on the most up-to-date rehabilitation research and practice in

an environment that encourages healing

– both mentally and physically. One of

the ways to ensure best practice is to work

more closely with clinicians who are highly regarded in all major areas of rehabilitative care. Specifically, we are collaborating

with the CR team to develop bespoke staff

training and work with us to develop new

services that meet the needs of our population groups.”

Accreditation

Dr Al-Hamad says there is also interest in

gaining accreditation through the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF).

“We’ve started consulting with our

counterparts at CR to learn more about

CARF procedures and expectations to establish the right basis for us to apply for

this renowned accreditation,” Dr Al-Hamad says.

CARF is an international organization

that assists service providers to improve

P:81

Huntleigh recently introduced a single-use intraoperative

probe for the Dopplex Doppler range.

Intraoperative Doppler ultrasound assessment provides immediate evidence of success in vascular reconstructive procedures. By providing quality assurance of blood flow intraoperatively, time can be saved and costs of a potential re-operation

avoided.

As a leader in diagnostic devices Huntleigh prioritises safety

and accuracy above all else, and single-use probes offer the best

combination.

Quality control is vitally important in performing surgery,

if secondary intervention and re-operation are to be avoided.

The Dopplex single-use intraoperative probe can assist in the

performance of safe surgery.

Accuracy of pulse detection

As a leader in diagnostic devices, Huntleigh prioritises accuracy and reliability above all else.

While some practitioners opt for manual palpation to detect

a pulse, it is easy to demonstrate that a pulse does not necessarily indicate good blood flow, and in fact the pulse gained from

a blocked vessel can be stronger than the pulse of an open one.

Infection risk

Another alternative to single-use probes is a non-surgical

probe in a makeshift sterile field such as a glove. This costs

theatre time, and greatly increases the risk of infection. The

Dopplex probe is supplied with a 2.5-metre sterilised cable to

minimise the opportunity for non-sterile objects entering the

sterile field.

As part of the Dopplex range, the flow detected by the probe

is immediately visualised on the DMX Doppler unit.

Huntleigh

launches single-use

intraoperative probe

Huntleigh

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 79

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80 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Digital pathology helps pathologists view,

manage, share, and analyze tissue samples

by converting glass slides into digital

slides. Therefore, you need a high-speed,

high-resolution slide scanner and an accurate barcode, which provides patient

information – or, at least, the patient ID

– throughout the entire process (from receiving the original specimen to digitizing

the tissue section for diagnosis under a virtual microscope).

Prevent misidentification

Indeed, one of the main goals of digitizing

the entire process is to prevent misidentification, and to make connecting, reviewing, and managing patient data faster and

more reliable. In the past, most labeling was

accomplished by handwriting information

with a pencil or marking pen. However,

handwriting tends to be difficult to read,

may be inaccurate, and can rub off during

processing. Even if the sample is not to be

scanned and digitized, a barcode – which

can only be produced digitally – is a necessity for matching it to other samples and

data in the laboratory information system

(LIS). Fortunately, today’s printing inks

are chemical- and UV-resistant enough to

withstand common laboratory processes.

With the right solution, labs can print not

only 2D barcodes, but also text, graphics,

and logos to scan and apply directly to tissue cassettes and slides. Such an approach

completely eliminates both handwriting

and expensive, difficult-to-apply xyleneDTM Medical

resistant labels – two things that decrease

workflow efficiency and place patient safety

at risk.

There are two types of printing systems

most laboratories use nowadays: cassette

printers and slide printers. Cassette printers are available as standalone manual

printers or as complete automated systems.

The standalone options, such as the Signature Cassette Printer, are compact, robust,

and small enough to fit next to a grossing

station. They usually load one tissue cassette at a time through an operator. These

modern manual printers can produce several cassettes per minute. Fully automated

systems function at nearly the same speed,

but use separate hoppers instead of requiring manual input. Some models even come

with a robotic arm that picks each cassette

from the top of the desired stack and places

it into the printer. Exactly like that is the

SCP-R version of the Signature Cassette

Printer. It’s a completely automated system consisting of the Signature Cassette

Printer and a new upgraded robotic picking system called Autoloader EVO.

Slide printers

Slide printers, like the Signature Slide

Printer EVO, are designed for efficient,

hands-free operation. Because slides are

stored in easy-to-load cartridges that protect them from dust and other potential

contaminants, they increase workflow

safety and slide longevity. The devices can

also print in a variety of hues and shades,

reducing the need to purchase consumables in different colors. State-of-the-art

systems are advanced enough to offer ondemand or batch mode printing and are

also designed for very low noise emission.

Placing a cassette printer at a grossing

station or a slide printer at a microtome

station is an important step toward significantly increasing the lab’s efficiency while

reducing the risk of specimen misidentification. Even after several years, cassettes

and slides with properly printed labels can

be reliably identified. By printing on tissue

cassettes and slides, we digitize the entire

process chain, which not only facilitates

LIS integration but also (when using the

right printer) prepares the laboratory for a

future in which the entire pathology workflow is digital.

DTM Medical at Medlab 2023

DTM Medical will showcase the Signature

Series at Medlab 2023 at stand Z6.F33 in

Za’abeel Hall 6 and is well represented in

the Middle East through its network of

experienced local distribution partners in

the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia,

Qatar, Oman, Kuwait and Bahrain.

DTM Medical

Mainzer Str. 131

65187 Wiesbaden, Germany

Phone: +49 611 92777-0

Email: [email protected]

Website: dtm-medical.eu

Think before you (don’t) print

Consider the importance of specimen

identification solutions in pathology digitization

P:84

Thanks to legislative reforms,

the UAE has been repeatedly

one of the first countries to

launch innovative therapies,

while always advancing the

healthcare system to expand

access to medicines for

patients who need them.

82 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Diabetes is a global pandemic that is not

going away, with 16.3% of adults in UAE

aged between 20 and 79 years afflicted by

the disease – a number that is expected to

double by 2040.

Type 2 is the most common form of diabetes in the UAE, with weight, smoking,

sedentary lifestyle, and poor diets linked to

the illness.

If diabetes is not detected and well managed, it can lead to severe complications

and, ultimately, premature death. And yet

an estimated the 50 percent of people living with diabetes are undiagnosed. This

may be due to lack of awareness about

symptoms, or absence of regular health

screening, for example.

Being part of the pharmaceutical industry, at Lilly, our number one priority is to

work with different stakeholders to improve diabetes healthcare outcomes, with

patients at the centre of this process.

Building a healthcare ecosystem

The first task is to prevent diabetes. While

Type 1 diabetes and some of the risk factors

for Type 2 diabetes, such as family history,

can’t be avoided, there are many other risk

factors that we can control.

For example, in the UAE, we are fortunate to have a government that is redefining healthcare by moving from sick care

towards prevention.

Specifically for diabetes, this includes

several education programmes in schools

and workplaces, together with fitness and

awareness programmes, such as the ongoing Dubai Fitness Challenge, which encourage lasting healthy habits.

The UAE has also done some vital work

in advancing innovations and fostering an

environment that incentivizes advancements in treatments and care. This summer,

Dubai Health Authority launched an analytics-based, digital-led programme, Ejadah,

that will form the foundation for valuebased healthcare adoption. The platform is

Working to a healthier future

Diabetes

expected to lead to faster claim approvals,

minimise waste of healthcare expenditure,

and focus on preventive care, while allowing access to next-generation technology.

Technology is also playing a key role in

patient outcomes monitoring. However,

a pre-requisite to using technology is to

complete important work around data privacy. Such data plays a key role in understanding disease management, progression

to improve patient care.

Another form of providing local data is

Real-World Evidence (RWE). RWE are

studies that aim to provide insights on diseases, medicines, patient populations and

healthcare practices. This landscape continues to evolve rapidly in the UAE, and

Lilly has embarked on this journey to support providing local data across different

therapy areas, including diabetes.

Partners for success

Another advantage of this developing

health ecosystem is that it allows for rapid

introduction of innovative medicines and

treatments. Thanks to legislative reforms,

the UAE has been repeatedly one of the

first countries to launch innovative therapies, while always advancing the healthcare system to expand access to medicines

for patients who need them.

Most recently, the UAE was the first country to approve and launch our innovative

diabetes treatment, a new class of medication

in nearly a decade, just one month after it received FDA approval in the US. This is a true

testament to the country’s commitment to

advance access to innovative therapies, protect innovation, and reward it. This was also

an exceptional milestone for Lilly, as we were

the first company that made insulin commercially available 100 years ago. Discovering and

launching a new class of medicines in the occasion of our insulin centennial speaks to our

long-lasting commitment to help people living with diabetes.

I believe the role of pharmaceutical

companies does not stop there. Making

sure that patients can access innovative

treatments is at the centre of our work.

Lilly’s Sawiyan programme in the UAE

was introduced to support patients who

have affordability challenges to help them

access the medicines they need. This programme is supported by the UAE Ministry

of Health and Prevention.

Lilly is also working with the Emirates

Diabetes Society in the UAE and other

industry stakeholders to support efforts

on patient education, access to treatment,

and healthcare providers’ engagement and

awareness about innovations.

Finding a cure for diabetes is the ultimate

dream. But the reality today is that tangible

steps can help prevent diabetes through education and lifestyle changes, and improvements to the management of diabetes is

possible through early detection, innovative

treatments, and regular health screening.

Diabetes is a growing problem in the UAE – but the groundwork is being laid

for improved outcomes. Amr Saeed, Corporate Affairs Director for Eli Lilly Gulf,

Levant, and Pakistan, looks at some of the latest developments.

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84 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Uterine rupture remains one of the most

frightening complications in obstetric

care. The risk of its occurrence is likely

to increase for many women who undergo

caesarean sections.

It is important to consider because it

continues to be associated with maternal

and foetal mortality, especially in developing countries, and with major maternal

morbidity, particularly peripartum hysterectomies.

Maternal outcomes following uterine

rupture include hysterectomy, bladder injuries, transfusion, ICU admission, shock,

assisted ventilation, and an increase in

hospital length of stay.

Diagnosis of uterine rupture

The diagnosis of uterine rupture is principally based on clinical manifestations,

foetal heart abnormalities, or imaging examinations before or after delivery.

There should be a higher index of suspicion by the healthcare provider, in order

to identify the rupture as early as possible,

and provide immediate surgical treatment.

The main reason that a patient is predisposed to uterine rupture is weakness of

the muscle layer of the inferior segment of

the uterus after caesarean section, or after

scarring of any sort, in this area.

It is also associated with obstructed labour, prolonged labour, the use of induction agents, malpresentation, and grand

multiparity.

Deliver the baby as soon as possible

The key message is that the delivery of

the baby should be done as soon and as

safely possible if a uterine rupture is suspected.

If the rupture is suspected after delivery,

an immediate response for management

and treatment should start. Stabilising

the patient clinically with transfusions,

medications and proper intravenous access

Women’s Health

should be done concomitantly with preparation of the operating room theatre and a welltrained team.

A major decision facing the surgeon

will be whether to preserve the uterus

with a repair, or perform a hysterectomy.

Obviously, the patient’s desire for future

pregnancies is important, but this may be

superseded by the emergent need to perform

life-saving measures such as hysterectomy.

The traditional approach is to perform a laparotomy, and either repair the

uterine defect or remove the uterus. It is

very important once inside to control the

haemorrhage and identify damage to adjacent organs, most likely the bladder.

Minimally invasive techniques using

laparoscopy or keyhole surgery have been

described in the literature. These will allow a faster recovery with less pain, and a

decrease in postoperative wound complications.

da Vinci Xi HD 4 arm robotic system

Recently at Mediclinic City Hospital,

Dubai, Dr Labib Riachi, an expert in advanced robotic gynaecological surgery,

and his team performed a repair of a uterine rupture using the da Vinci Xi HD 4

Dr Labib Riachi is a

Consultant Obstetrician &

Gynaecologist. He specialises

in Minimally Invasive

Gynaecological Surgery,

Obstetrics and Gynaecology

and Urogynaecology

• View Dr Labib Riachi’s

Mediclinic profile here:

https://www.mediclinic.ae/en/city-hospital/

specialized-units/da-vinci-robotic-surgerysystem.doctor.html/8/labib-riachi.html

Mediclinic City Hospital uses

advanced da Vinci robot for

uterine rupture repair

arm robotic system which enabled them

to use the most advanced surgical techniques available worldwide. This allowed

an unparalleled level of high precision

in manipulating torn tissues, as well as a

three-dimensional view of the field, with

the freedom to rotate the instruments independently without any assistance. The

repair was done successfully in 30 minutes. Following surgery, the patient was

taken to a regular ward and recovered

with no complications.

The da Vinci Xi HD 4 arm

robotic surgical system

Dr Labib Riachi, Consultant

Obstetrician & Gynaecologist,

Mediclinic City Hospital, Dubai.

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86 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

AIRS Medical showcases SWIFTMR Artificial

Intelligence solution for MR imaging

At the RSNA radiology event in Chicago

in November last year, South Korea-based

AIRS Medical, a leading medical AI solution

provider, showcased SWIFTMR, an FDA

510(k)-cleared AI Imaging solution that enhances MR images acquired under various

conditions, contributing to better image quality and patient experience. SwiftMR utilizes

conventional MR imaging techniques such

as parallel imaging and compressed sensing,

combined with its award-winning deep learning technology. SwiftMR thus enhances SNR

and sharpness of the images, allowing radiologists to read with confidence and ease.

Since its official commercial launch in Korea in the fourth quarter of 2021, SwiftMR

has been installed in more than 100 hospitals,

for an average of 30,000 monthly MRI exams.

After its successful launch and with proven

performance in Korea, the company is rapidly

expanding globally.

n For more information,

visit: airsmed.com

Annalise.ai has joined the Nuance Precision

Imaging Network (PIN), connecting Annalise.ai workflow orchestration and diagnostic

support solutions to over 12,000 healthcare

facilities worldwide. Annalise.ai is one of

the largest medical imaging AI companies in

the world, developing robust AI solutions intended to assist with the interpretation of radiological imaging studies. In 2022, Annalise.

ai’s chest X-ray products received U.S. FDA

clearance for use in triage and notification for

a subset of chest X-ray findings.

The collaboration between Annalise.ai and

Nuance Communications (a Microsoft company) also harnesses the power of AI from

Annalise.ai to enhance the Nuance Clinical

Analytics platform. This will complement

Natural Language Processing (NLP) within

Nuance’s Clinical Analytics platform to create an advanced AI analytics engine, allowing

radiologists to better evaluate the results from

AI, as well as mine their historical reports using the power of AI through mPower. The

combination of pixel-level insights and textbased insights helps providers extract deeper

meaning from their medical imaging data.

“We want to transform healthcare for patients around the world every single day and

have already impacted more than one million

lives globally through our Annalise.ai solutions,” said Lakshmi Gudapakkam, Annalise.

ai CEO. “We are extremely excited about

the enormous potential of this collaboration

to empower radiologists and other clinicians

through end-to-end workflow support.”

n For more information, visit: https://bit.ly/3YzsanT

Annalise AI collaborates with Nuance Communications

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GE Healthcare has launched its SIGNA Experience, a platform of

four synergistic technologies that help users through the diagnostic journey. This integrated collection works together to ensure a

smooth MRI scanning experience for the physician, technologists

of all skill levels, and the patient.

• SIGNA One is the cornerstone of these solutions: A next generation, imaging software platform supporting an elegant, intuitive

user interface, designed to offer high quality magnetic resonance

(MR) imaging.

• AI/Deep-learning solutions: Pioneering, deep-learning AI

applications, such as AIR Recon DL for improved signal-to-noise

ratio (SNR), image sharpness and shorter scan time.

• Workflow solutions: Automated, intelligent workflow technologies, that include AIR x and AIRTouch, which guide technologists to help make an MRI scan set up better, faster, and easier.

• AIR Coils: Industry leading, transformative technology in coils,

which are flexible, lightweight, and comfortable, enabling total freedom in coil positioning and handling during an MRI scan.

With operational efficiency the fastest growing challenge for radiology departments, SIGNA One enables greater workflow productivity

by requiring only a fraction of the clicks needed to perform an exam

from setup to completed scan. The benefits of this user interface are

that it enables:

• Intuitive workflow for all experience levels and virtually

no learning curve. Technologists can keep track of progress at a

glance with useful visual reminders, showing them where they are

at any point within the scanning process.

• Efficiency with visually assisted highlighted fields to guide

technologists step-by-step, making the process flow easily; and

flexibility in design to accommodate for future expansion in AI

and workflows.

• Simplification with an easy-to-use express mode which only

requires a few clicks to complete an examination, helping to

streamline workflow and optimize throughput.

• Intelligent automation that highlights the most likely action

following a scan.

SIGNA One is currently commercially available on SIGNA

Prime. All other SIGNA Experience solutions are commercially

available.

n For more information, visit: www.gehealthcare.com

GE Healthcare

releases SIGNA

Experience

technologies for MRI

Siemens Healthineers has unveiled the Magnetom Viato.Mobile, its latest MRI scanner optimized for mobile use and featuring a patient bore of 70 cm. The Magnetom Viato.Mobile is currently under development and is not yet commercially available.

“With Magnetom Viato.Mobile, we plan to offer the most

powerful innovations at 1.5 Tesla for mobile use. Installed in

a trailer setup to provide greater flexibility in deploying MR

imaging, the scanner can easily be taken from one place to the

next or stay at the customer’s site for longer use. For example,

the solution can help with screening programmes in underserved regions – it’s not the patient coming to the scanner,

but the other way around,” explained Arthur Kaindl, head of

Magnetic Resonance Imaging at Siemens Healthineers.

Operation and service of Magnetom Viato.Mobile can be

done remotely via a fixed internet or, if needed, via a 4G connection. This means that the system can be used almost anywhere, while experts – when required – can provide support

from another location during two crucial steps: performing the

scan and maintaining the system. This means that fewer staff are

Siemens Healthineers

introduces new mobile MRI

Magnetom Viato.Mobile

needed on site, specialists can work from home and service technicians can take exactly the right spare part with them when they

deploy for maintenance.

• For more information, visit: www.siemens-healthineers.com

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At the RSNA radiology event in Chicago in

November last year, radiology reporting specialist OpenRad launched its enterprise remote

reporting platform, Enterprise Edition, which

enables cloud-based reporting, collaborative

workflows across companies and advanced mobile fleet management in one offering.

At a time when increased workload and

radiologist shortages are putting a strain on

the healthcare system, OpenRad Enterprise

Edition allows imaging centres to fully leverage remote radiologists to speed up the

diagnostic process, increase efficiency, improve patient experience, and reduce costs.

The OpenRad SaaS based platform

provides a fully digital end-to-end teleradiology workflow – combining a domestic

cloud platform, OpenRad Cloud (by Biotronics3D), with a DICOM 3.0 routing,

translation, compression, and encryption

device, OpenRad Cube (by Visbion),

which includes the industry leading mobile fleet management solution.

OpenRad’s solutions have been implemented in more than 350 clinics and other

static imaging sites as well as in 350 mobile

trailers across 18 countries.

OpenRad Enterprise Edition also offers radiologists the option to view images

through their existing picture archiving

communications system (PACS) via a

single cloud. The solution can be easily

applied to fleets of mobile scanning trailers where imaging data is seamlessly and

securely fed into the PACS.

The solution is designed to help imaging

centres optimise the use of equipment and

reduce the impact of radiology staff shortages.

Radiologists, referrers, imaging providers

and patients are all able to access the webbased platform remotely via any device

connected to the internet. This collective

intelligence with AI integrations makes

it easier to address complex decisions and

drive innovation in disease prevention,

diagnosis, and monitoring. It also features

intelligent worklists, contract management, referrer and patient portals as well

as peer review capability.

The OpenRad Cloud offering has minimal on-premise and end user information

technology costs, since the zero-footprint

solution is fully web-based and utilises existing workstations and monitors.

Brian Plackis Cheng, CEO, OpenRad said: “At RSNA, we are delighted

to launch OpenRad Cloud and Cube for

the European market and OpenRad Cube

for the US market. Our comprehensive

SaaS-based platform, Enterprise Edition,

will increase collaboration, improve patient outcomes, and reduce costs. OpenRad Enterprise Edition will better connect

healthcare professionals, imaging centres,

referrers, and their patients, unlocking the

full potential of medical imaging. Together

with our customers and partners, we will

fully deliver the cloud promise and benefits

in teleradiology.”

• For more information, visit: www.openrad.com

OpenRad unveils enterprise remote

reporting platform for radiology

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92 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

Philips has launched globally their next-generation compact portable

ultrasound solution, the Compact 5000 Series. This new ultrasound is

designed for portability and versatility without compromising image

quality or performance and aims to bring the diagnostic quality associated with premium cart-based ultrasound systems to more patients.

Replicating the intuitive user interface and workflow of Philips’

cart-based systems EPIQ Elite and Affiniti, and offering full compatibility with these systems’ transducers, the Compact 5000 Series

supports an easy learning curve for users. Designed for shared service

capabilities across specialties including cardiovascular, obstetrics and

gynaecology, point of care, and general imaging, the Compact 5000

Series system helps meet the needs of multiple clinical segments. The

Compact system can be configured with an optional battery allowing for 2.5 hours of scanning time and faster power-up capability to

quickly ready the system at the patient’s side. Additionally, the new

system features fewer hard keys on the console and a fully sealed control panel for easy disinfection and cleaning protocols.

“Improving patient outcomes and the patient experience means

providing clinicians with our best diagnostic tools available and

making advanced technology available wherever the patient is located,” said Jeff Cohen, general manager of Ultrasound at Philips.

“With the patient at the centre of everything we do, we

built the Ultrasound Compact System 5000 Series to perform as a highly versatile portable ultrasound system to be

used in multiple care settings for many different types of

exams without compromising image quality, diagnostic ability, or clinical workflow.”

This newest system also features ‘Philips Collaboration Live’

secure real-time telemedicine software, with the ability to call on

additional clinical expertise via secure voice, text, screen sharing, and video streaming from anywhere with a mobile or internet

connection. Collaboration Live even allows a remote user to control the unit’s settings to acquire diagnostic quality images, reducing the need for follow-up scans and patients having to travel to a

central hospital facility.

The Compact 5000 Series recently received U.S. FDA

510(k) clearance and is pending CE mark.

Philips launches new

compact ultrasound system

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MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 93

Busch developed a new concept: a central

vacuum supply for all particle counters using

two vacuum pumps, which operate according

to the MINK claw vacuum principle. These

are also equipped with an intelligent drive

with a frequency converter, which enables

the vacuum pumps to be regulated such that

they permanently operate at the required

performance, even if the process conditions

change. In May 2014, two MINK MV 0040

D claw vacuum pumps were installed in the

technical centre of the JCC and operated redundantly. This means that only one of the

two vacuum pumps is in operation, while the

other acts as a stand-by.

The two new vacuum pumps are programmed to maintain a precise standard flow

of 28.3 litres per minute at the particle counters. Both vacuum pumps are connected to

the building control system and constantly

monitored, with any malfunctions immediately displayed. The vacuum system is in use

Busch provides reliable vacuum

supply in clean rooms

Busch Vacuum Solutions

around the clock, with the control system designed by the technical centre of the university hospital in such a way that the vacuum

pumps operate alternately and therefore both

spend the same amount of time in operation.

In the event that one of the vacuum pumps

malfunctioned, the control system would immediately ensure that the other pump springs

into operation and the vacuum supply does

not fail. A continuous and reliable measurement of the particles in the air in clean rooms

at the Josè-Carreas-centre for somatic cell

therapy is imperative.

MINK vacuum system solution

and its benefits for the customer

MINK claw vacuum pumps operate dry,

meaning that they are free from operating

fluids in the compression chamber and operate contact-free. Unlike dry-running rotary vane pumps, there is no wear, thanks

to this method of contact-free operation. It

is another reason why this type of vacuum

pump permanently generates the required

pumping speed. The operation without

operating fluids and without wearing parts

makes the MINK claw vacuum pump virtually maintenance-free. This new vacuum

technology has been in operation at the José-Carreras Centre since May 2014, and so

far, there have been no “flow alarms” in the

clean room or any other malfunctions or

disruptions to the vacuum supply. Furthermore, in the last 3 years since implementation of the MINK claw vacuum pumps no

maintenance work has been required on the

vacuum pumps.

Contact:

Website: www.buschvacuum.com

Phone: +971 (0) 50 6312898

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The Covid pandemic has revealed just

how delicate our public health is in terms

of overcoming infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance. Over the last decade

small proteins known as anti-microbial

peptides (AMPs) have delivered promising results in helping anti-infectives

overcome increasing antibiotic resistance

problems but have proven difficult to commercially produce.

Now, a radical research project involving

experts from the University of Huddersfield

aims to develop a new method for the commercial production of AMPs which if successful will open up a whole new range of opportunities for the use of bio-active peptides.

The RADOV Project

Titled RADOV or ‘RADiation harvesting of bioactive peptides from egg prOteins and their integration in adVanced

functional products’, the four-year project

features an international consortium of

partners and has been awarded €2 million

from the European Union’s Euratom Research and Training Programme (EURATOM) Horizon Europe to carry out the

necessary research.

Heading the team from the University

is Professor Robert Edgecock from the

University’s School of Computing and

Engineering. He revealed why AMPs

have aroused great interest as potential

next-generation antibiotics and how because long-term chemotherapy in cancer

patients can lead to resistance to conventional cancer treatments and a susceptibility to pathogenic infection, due

to AMPs’ antibacterial and anticancer

properties, they could also become a new

treatment option for cancer patients.

A potential gamechanger in

beating antimicrobial resistance

Innovation in Healthcare

What are anti-microbial peptides?

“Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are small

proteins present in different lifeforms in

nature, or that result from enzymatic digestion of proteins, which provides these

lifeforms with a natural defence against

microbial infections,” he said.

“In addition to the more specific antibacterial and anti-viral actions, they have

shown immune-modulatory activities, antifungal actions, anti-inflammatory properties and even possess the ability to disintegrate cancerous cell membranes,” he added.

What makes AMPs viable and important alternative antimicrobial agents,

explained Prof. Edgecock, is the fact that

the development of resistance by the microbes against the AMPs is relatively slow

or delayed compared to that against conventional antibiotics.

“However, despite their promise,” he

said, “very few of the AMPs have been

commercialised so far, mainly due to technical difficulties in their manufacture.”

Synthesising AMPs

To begin with, the researchers will use beams

of electrons to synthesise the AMPs from egg

proteins, and the results acquired regarding

the peptide structure, irradiation conditions,

and related bioactivity properties will become a vital output of the project.

The researchers will then use electron

beam irradiation to further integrate the

AMPs into two new products, peptideladen antimicrobial/antioxidant hydrogel

wound dressings and peptide-grafted active plastic foils for food packaging. This

will effectively demonstrate the potential

of the technique and the benefit of the

antimicrobial properties of egg-derived

bioactive peptides manufactured by radiation-induced fragmentation.

Co-ordinating the project is Poland’s Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology, who will be assisted by the University of

Huddersfield, Sweden’s KTH Royal Institute

of Technology, Italy’s University of Palermo,

the Italian National Research Council and

Portugal’s Association of Instituto Superior

Técnico for Research and Development.

Also playing a crucial role in the successful implementation of the project will

be three industrial partners: Kikgel Sp. z

o.o. and Dekofilm Polska Sp. z o.o. from

Poland and Italy’s E.P.S. S.p.A. Egg Powder Specialists.

A radical project involving a team of researchers

from the University of Huddersfield aims to

develop a new method for the commercial

production of anti-microbial peptide’s (AMPs) and

if successful could open up a whole new range of

opportunities for the use of bio-active peptides.

Beams of

electrons will

synthesise the

AMPs from

egg proteins

obtained

preferably from

an abundant

waste stream

of the egg

industry, such

as the eggshell

membrane.

P:97

The development of autism may now become

easier to understand, thanks to an explanatory

model presented in a thesis from University

of Gothenburg, Sweden. This model provides

new insights into how various risk factors give

rise to autism and why there is such great variability between individuals.

Autism, a neurodevelopmental condition,

affects how people perceive the world around

them and how they interact and communicate with others. Among individuals with

autism, there are major differences in terms

of personal traits and manifestations alike.

The disorder is therefore usually described as

a spectrum, with numerous subtle variations.

The new explanatory model is theoretical

but simultaneously practical in application,

since its various components are measurable through, for example, questionnaires,

genetic mapping, and psychological tests.

The model describes various contributing

factors and how they combine to prompt an

autism diagnosis and cause other neurodevelopmental conditions.

Three contributing factors

The model links three contributing factors. Together, these result in a pattern of

behaviour that meets the criteria for an

autism diagnosis:

1. Autistic personality – hereditary common genetic variants that give rise to an

autistic personality.

2. Cognitive compensation – intelligence and executive functions, such as the

capacity to learn, understand others, and

adapt to social interactions.

3. Exposure to risk factors – for example,

harmful genetic variants, infections, and other

random events during gestation and early childhood that adversely affect cognitive ability.

“The autistic personality is associated with

both strengths and difficulties in cognition

but does not, as such, mean that diagnostic

criteria are fulfilled. Still, exposure to risk

factors that inhibit people’s cognitive ability

may affect their capacity to tackle difficulties, which contributes to individuals being

diagnosed with autism,” says Darko Sarovic,

physician and postdoctoral researcher at SahlModel explains

how autism arises

grenska Academy, University of Gothenburg,

who wrote the thesis.

The model makes it clear that it is the

many different risk factors combined that

bring about the major differences among

individuals on the spectrum. The various

components of the model are supported by

results from previous research.

Adaptive ability

High executive functioning skills may enable people to compensate for their impairment in such a way as to mitigate the symptoms, which reduces their risk of meeting

the diagnostic criteria for autism. This may

explain why, at group level, researchers observe a lower degree of intelligence among

people diagnosed with autism, as well as

other neurodevelopmental conditions. It

also affords an understanding of why intellectual disability is more common among

these groups. Thus, the model indicates

that low cognitive ability is not part of the

autistic personality but, rather, a risk factor

that leads to diagnostic criteria being met.

“The autistic personality is associated

with various strengths. For example, parents of children with autism are overrepresented among engineers and mathematicians. The parents themselves have

probably been able to compensate for their

own autistic personality traits and thus not

met the criteria for an autism diagnosis.

The impact of the disorder has then become more noticeable in their children

owing, for instance, to an exposure to risk

factors and relatively low cognitive ability,” Sarovic says.

Difference between girls and boys

The diagnosis of autism is more common

among boys than girls, and girls often get

their diagnosis later in life. Some girls reach

adulthood before being diagnosed, after

many years of diffuse personal difficulties.

“Girls’ symptoms are often less evident to

other people. It’s well known that girls generally have more advanced social skills, which

probably means that they’re better at compensating for their own difficulties. Girls also tend

to have fewer autistic traits and be less susceptible to the effects of risk factors. Accordingly,

the model can help to answer questions about

the gender gap,” Sarovic says.

Research and diagnostics

The model also proposes ways of estimating and measuring the three factors (autistic

personality, cognitive compensation and exposure to risk factors). This makes it possible

to use the model in the planning of research

studies and interpretation of their results.

Diagnostics is another conceivable area

of use. In a pilot study in which 24 participants had been diagnosed with autism and

22 controls had not, measuring the three

factors of the model enabled more than 93

percent to be correctly assigned to the right

category. The model can also be used to explain the inception of other neurodevelopmental disorders, such as schizophrenia.

Darko Sarovic is now a postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard Medical School in

Boston, Massachusetts, while remaining affiliated to the Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre

at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden

A Multimodal Approach toward

the Biological Categorization of Autism

— Development of Theoretical Models,

Classification Methods, and Biomarkers.

https://hdl.handle.net/2077/73553

The three factors have different weights, and

jointly build up to the diagnosis of autism.

photo: Max Thorsson

Darko Sarovic, physician and postdoctoral

researcher at Sahlgrenska Academy,

University of Gothenburg.

MIDDLE EAST HEALTHI 95

P:98

96 IMIDDLE EAST HEALTH

To perform coordinated movements, we

rely on special sensory neurons in our

muscles and joints. Without them, the

brain wouldn’t know what the rest of our

body was doing. A team led by Dr Niccolò Zampieri, head of the Development

and Function of Neural Circuits Lab at

the Max Delbrück Center in Berlin, has

studied their molecular markers to better

understand how they work and describes

the results in Nature Communications [1].

Sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch:

We’re all familiar with the five senses that

allow us to experience our surroundings.

Equally important but much less well

known is the sixth sense: “Its job is to

collect information from the muscles and

joints about our movements, our posture

and our position in space, and then pass

that on to our central nervous system,”

says Dr Zampieri. “This sense, known as

proprioception, is what allows the central

nervous system to send the right signals

through motor neurons to muscles so that

we can perform a specific movement.”

This sixth sense – which, unlike the

other five, is entirely unconscious – is what

stops us from falling over in the dark, and

what allows us to raise a cup of coffee to our

mouth with our eyes shut in the morning.

But that’s not all: “People without proprioception can’t actually perform coordinated

movements,” says Dr Zampieri.

In the study, he and his team describe

the molecular markers of the cells involved in this sixth sense. The findings

should help researchers to better understand how proprioceptive sensory neurons (pSN) work.

The genes

of the

sixth sense

The Back Page

Precise connections are crucial

The pSN cell bodies are located in the

dorsal root ganglia of the spinal cord. They

are connected via long nerve fibres to the

muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs

that constantly register stretch and tension

in every muscle of the body. The pSN send

this information to the central nervous

system, where it is used to control motor

neuron activity so that we can perform

movements.

“One prerequisite for this is that pSN

precisely connect to different muscles in

our bodies,” says Dr Stephan Dietrich, a

member of Zampieri’s lab. However, almost nothing was known about the molecular programs that enable these precise

connections and lend the muscle-specific

pSN their unique identity. “That’s why we

used our study to look for molecular markers that differentiate the pSN for the abdominal, back and limb muscles in mice,”

says Dr Dietrich, lead author of the study.

Guidance for nascent nerve fibres

Using single-cell sequencing, the team investigated which genes in the pSN of the

abdominal, back and leg muscles are read

and translated into RNA. “We did find

characteristic genes for the pSN connected

to each muscle group,” says Dr Dietrich.

“We also showed that these genes are already active at the embryonic stage and remain active for at least a while after birth.”

Dr Dietrich explains that this means

there are fixed genetic programs that decide whether a proprioceptor will innervate the abdominal, back or limb muscles.

Among their findings, the Berlin researchers identified several genes for ephrins and their receptors. “We know that

these proteins are involved in guiding

nascent nerve fibres to their target during

development of the nervous system,” says

Dr Dietrich. The team found that the connections between the proprioceptors and

the rear leg muscles were impaired in mice

that can’t produce ephrin-A5.

Better neuroprostheses

“The markers we identified should now

help us further investigate the development

and function of individual muscle-specific

sensory networks,” says Dr Dietrich. “With

optogenetics, for instance, we can use light

to turn proprioceptors on and off, either individually or in groups. This will allow us to

reveal their specific role in our sixth sense.”

This knowledge should eventually benefit

patients, such as those with spinal cord injuries. “Once we better understand the details of

proprioception, we’ll be able to optimize the

design of neuroprostheses, which take over

motor or sensory abilities that have been impaired by an injury,” says Dr Zampieri.

Scoliosis

He adds that researchers in Israel have recently discovered that properly functioning proprioception is also important for a

healthy skeleton. Scoliosis, for instance,

is a condition that sometimes develops

during growth in childhood and causes

the spine to become crooked and twisted.

“We suspect this is caused by dysfunctional proprioception, which alters the

muscle tension in the back and distorts

the spine,” says Dr Zampieri.

Reference: 1. doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34589-8

Different populations of sensory neurons cell bodies in a dorsal root ganglion

(right) and their axons in the spinal cord (left): The cells in green detect

proprioceptive information while the cells in red thermal and tactile information.

Stephan Dietrich, Zampieri Lab, Max Delbrück Center

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