The National Health Research Institutes (NHRI) of Taiwan has teamed up with Taiwanese computer manufacturer Asustek Computer Inc. and American cloud computing company Nvidia Corp. to build Taiwan’s first supercomputer for medical research.
Meduni Vienna, the Medical University of Vienna, Austria, is working on a novel eye scanner combining the structural and functional sensitivity of optical coherence tomography (OCT) with the chemical specificity of Raman spectroscopy, to acquire data from the living human eye.
Ossio Inc. has received FDA clearance for Ossiofiber suture anchors used to fix soft tissue to bone in the shoulder, foot and ankle. This is the most recent of clearances for the company’s intelligent bone regeneration technology which began in 2019 as a possible alternative to permanent fixation implants for the foot and ankle alone.
Merit Medical Systems Inc. received FDA 510(k) clearance for the Scout Bx delivery system, which enables the placement during stereotactic and MRI-guided biopsy of a reflector to guide breast surgery. The delivery system works with the company’s Scout reflector, a wire-free radar localization device.
Regulatory snapshots, including global submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Merit Medical, Sanolla, Truvic.
Med-tech happenings, including deals and partnerships, grants, preclinical data and other news in brief: Abingworth, Carlyle, Crosscope, Davita, Newstem, Rockwell Medical, Royal Philips, Stryker.
Fairtility Ltd.’s artificial intelligence (AI)-trained embryo classification system offers patients struggling with infertility and their physicians a better way to maximize the likelihood of implantation following in vitro fertilization (IVF) without the risk of a multiple pregnancy, a study in the Nature portfolio journal Scientific Reports found.
Quanterix Corp.’s Simoa technology helped drive a large, international study to establish reference ranges of serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) to assess individual disease activity and drug response in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. The study, published in The Lancet Neurology, utilized Simoa’s ability to precisely detect sNfL protein at ultra-low levels, enabling it to be reliably measured across a broad range of healthy individuals.