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Fellowbook News

AIMBE Fellowbook collects news stories highlighting the members of the AIMBE College of Fellows. Read the latest stories, jump to the College Directory, or search below to find the newest research, awards, announcements and more for the leaders of the medical and biological engineering community.

 

 

How Omicron escapes from antibodies

Ram Sasisekharan | Via MIT | February 1, 2022

A new study from MIT suggests that the dozens of mutations in the spike protein of the Omicron variant help it to evade all four of the classes of antibodies that can target the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes Covid-19. This includes antibodies generated by vaccinated or previously infected people, as well as most of the […]

New tool harnesses immune cells from tumors to effectively fight cancer

Shana Kelley | Via News-Medical.Net | January 28, 2022

Northwestern scientists have developed a new tool to harness immune cells from tumors to fight cancer rapidly and effectively, published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering. Their findings showed a dramatic shrinkage in tumors in mice compared to traditional cell therapy methods. With a novel microfluidic device that could be 3D printed, the team multiplied, […]

Digitized Number 2: Stool Samples Reveal Microbial Enzyme Driving Bowel Disease

Rob Knight | Via University of California San Diego | January 27, 2022

Ulcerative colitis, a subtype of inflammatory bowel disease, is a chronic ailment of the colon affecting nearly one million individuals in the United States. It is thought to be linked to disruptions in the gut microbiome — the bacteria and other microbes that live inside us — but no existing treatments actually target these microorganisms. […]

Synthetic Platelets Quickly Stop Bleeding from Injuries in Rodents

Anirban Sen Gupta | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | January 27, 2022

More than two million platelet units are needed in the United States every year. However, natural platelets aren’t always available or portable, have a high risk of contamination, and have a limited shelf life of 5 to 7 days, prompting research over the last several decades into synthetic alternatives. For that reason, alternatives have been […]

Dan Duda Elected to 2021 AAAS Fellows

Dan Duda | Via Harvard Medical School | January 26, 2022

Three Harvard Medical School researchers have been elected by their peers as 2021 Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) for their contributions to medical sciences. They are among the 564 scientists, engineers, and innovators from 24 scientific disciplines being recognized for their scientifically and socially distinguished achievements. Dan Duda, HMS […]

Guillermo Ameer Awarded the Technology Innovation and Development Award

Guillermo Ameer | Via Northwestern University | January 26, 2022

Northwestern Engineering’s Guillermo A. Ameer, Daniel Hale Williams Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the McCormick School of Engineering and Surgery at the Feinberg School of Medicine, has been given the the 2022 Technology Innovation and Development Award by the Society For Biomaterials. This award recognizes an individual’s (or a team’s) successful application of basic and […]

Prestigious Fellowship Awarded to Two OU Researchers – the Only Oklahomans Selected This Year

Priyabrata Mukherjee | Via University of Oklahoma | January 26, 2022

Ann West, Ph.D. and Priyabrata Mukherjee, Ph.D. are among 564 scientists, engineers and innovators spanning 24 scientific disciplines being recognized for their scientifically and socially distinguished achievements. They are the only recipients from Oklahoma this year. “Dr. West and Dr. Mukherjee’s election as Fellows of AAAS is a testament to the significance and impact their […]

Achilefu recruited to lead new Department of Biomedical Engineering

Samuel Achilefu | Via UT Southwestern Medical Center | January 26, 2022

Molecular imaging expert Samuel Achilefu, Ph.D., will join UT Southwestern Feb. 1 as the first Chair of a new Department of Biomedical Engineering. Dr. Achilefu was recruited to UTSW from the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. He worked at Washington University for more than 20 years, most […]

When you feel you belong, everything becomes easy to tackle

Lola Eniola-Adefeso | Via Advanced Science News | January 24, 2022

Chemical engineer and STEM advocate Lola Eniola-Adefeso deciphers components of the blood and designs therapeutic particles to help treat disease. Talking to Lola Eniola-Adefeso is both motivating and inspiring. Born in the United States but having grown up in Nigeria, she realized at a young age that the sciences were her forte. Years later, Eniola-Adefeso […]

Destroying Senescent Stem Cells in the Brain Enhances Cognitive Function in Mice

David Kaplan | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | January 21, 2022

In vivo studies headed by researchers at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), Toronto, have demonstrated that destroying senescent cells in the aging stem cell niche enhances hippocampal neurogenesis and cognitive function in mice. “Our results provide further support for the notion that excessive senescence is a driving factor behind aging, and even late-life reduction […]

Strategies to minimize heterogeneity and optimize clinical trials in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS): Insights from mathematical modelling

Rakesh Jain | Via Science Direct | January 20, 2022

We demonstrate that modelling of COVID-19 pathobiology can suggest biomarkers that predict optimal response to a given immunomodulatory treatment. Mathematical modelling thus constitutes a novel adjunct to predictive enrichment and may aid in the reduction of heterogeneity in critical care trials… Continue reading.

Renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system inhibitors and survival in patients with hypertension treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors

Rakesh Jain | Via Science Direct | January 20, 2022

In this large retrospective study, patients with hypertension who were concomitantly taking a RAAS inhibitor during ICI therapy had better overall survival. This benefit was primarily noted among patients with gastrointestinal and genitourinary cancers. Prospective randomized trials are warranted to further evaluate and specify the benefit of RAAS inhibitors in patients with cancer who receive […]

UCLA’s Virtual Histology Could Eliminate Need for Invasive Biopsies for Some Skin Conditions and Cancers

Aydogan Ozcan | Via Dark Daily | January 19, 2022

What effect would elimination of tissue biopsies have on dermatopathology and clinical laboratory revenue? Quite a lot. Dermatologists alone account for a significant portion of skin biopsies sent to dermatopathologists. Thus, any new technology that can “eliminate the need for invasive skin biopsies” would greatly reduce the number of histopathological referrals and reduce revenue to […]

Researchers pilot ‘itty bitty’ device for earlier ovarian cancer detection

Jennifer Barton | Via University of Arizona | January 18, 2022

Due to a lack of effective screening and diagnostic tools, more than three-fourths of ovarian cancer cases are not found until the cancer is in an advanced stage. As a result, fewer than half of all women with ovarian cancer survive more than five years after diagnosis. Jennifer Barton, director of the University of Arizona […]

Nanotherapy offers new hope for the treatment of Type 1 diabetes

Guillermo Ameer | Via Northwestern University | January 17, 2022

Individuals living with Type 1 diabetes must carefully follow prescribed insulin regimens every day, receiving injections of the hormone via syringe, insulin pump or some other device. And without viable long-term treatments, this course of treatment is a lifelong sentence. Pancreatic islets control insulin production when blood sugar levels change, and in Type 1 diabetes, […]

UT Southwestern develops nanotherapeutic to ward off liver cancer

Andrew Wang | Via UT Southwestern Medical Center | January 14, 2022

Physician researchers from UT Southwestern Medical Center have developed an innovative nanotherapeutic drug that prevents cancer from spreading to the liver in mice. The new liver-specific microRNA drug, developed by a team led by Andrew Wang, M.D., is a promising candidate for drug companies that developed messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines for COVID-19, because of similarities […]

Mathematical model may help improve treatments and clinical trials of patients with COVID-19 and other illnesses

Rakesh Jain | Via Massachusetts General Hospital | January 14, 2022

A mathematical model revealed that the optimal time to initiate immune-modulating therapy in COVID-19 differed according to patients’ medical history and risk factors. Different patients also required different types of immunomodulation for optimal therapy. Certain biological markers that differed based on patient characteristics determined optimal treatment initiation time, and these markers pointed to particular biologic […]

Nanostructures get complex with electron equivalents

Chad Mirkin | Via University of Michigan | January 13, 2022

Complex crystals that mimic metals—including a structure for which there is no natural equivalent—can be achieved with a new approach to guiding nanoparticle self-assembly. Rather than just nanoparticles that serve as “atom equivalents,” the crystals produced and interpreted by Northwestern University, University of Michigan and Argonne National Laboratory rely on even smaller particles that simulate […]

Two antibodies synergize in triple whammy to pediatric cancers, study finds

Heike Daldrup-Link | Via Stanford Medicine | January 13, 2022

A combination of anti-cancer antibodies produced a powerfully synergistic response in two hard-to-treat pediatric cancers, according to a new study, in mice, led by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The results, which published online Jan. 13 in Nature Medicine, provide hope for better treatments of neuroblastoma, a cancer affecting young children that […]

Accomplished biomedical engineer, academic leader named Brown School of Engineering dean

Tejal Desai | Via Brown University | January 12, 2022

Tejal Desai, a professor and researcher who has led academic programs at the University of California San Francisco, Boston University and elsewhere, will work to expand collaborative engineering research and teaching. Tejal Desai, an accomplished biomedical engineer and academic leader who earned a bachelor’s degree with Brown’s Class of 1994, has been appointed the next […]