Baltimore Sun Sunday

Top medical innovation­s treat headaches, diabetes

A handheld device to detect melanoma, and amedicare program, also make new list

- By Debra Sherman

The best medical innovation­s for next year include an almond-size device implanted in the mouth to relieve severe headaches and a hand-held scanner resembling a blow dryer that detects skin cancer, the Cleveland Clinic said lastweek.

Theclinic’s annual list of the best medical innovation­s for 2013 includes better mammograph­y technology and new drugs to treat advanced prostate cancer.

Leading the 2013 list for innovation­s is an old procedure that has a new use due to findings in a recent study. Physicians and researcher­s at the clinic voted weight-loss surgery as the top medical innovation, not for its effectiven­ess in reducing obesity, but for its ability to control Type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease.

Over the years, bariatric surgeons noticed that the procedure would often rid obese patients ofType 2 diabetes before they even left the hospital.

Dr. Philip Schauer, head of the Cleveland Clinic’s Bariatric and Metabolic Institute, led a study examining this phenomenon, and the New England Journal of Medicine published the results earlier this year.

“Bariatric surgery has been around for a while,” Cleveland Clinic chief wellness officerDr. MichaelRoi­zen said.“Thereason it was chosen as the top innovation is because Medicare has broadened its indication forpayment, andMedicai­d inmany states follows Medicare. A lot of the other [private] insurance companies started covering it, so it’s much more accessible.”

The criteria that insurers use to cover the surgery have been broadened because of its effectiven­ess in controllin­g Type 2 diabetes, he said.

Doctors and researcher­s at the Cleveland Clinic voted for what they thoughtwer­e the biggest, most significan­t innovation­s from the 250 ideas submitted from their colleagues. Roizen said one of the main criteria for getting on the list is the number of people that the product or procedure can potentiall­y help.

For that reason, a device that helps relieve headaches, the second-most-common ailment after the cold, was second on the clinic’s list.

The miniaturiz­ed device — invented at the Cleveland Clinic and spun off into a separate, private company called Autonomic Technologi­es Inc — is implanted in the upper gum above the second molar to treat clusterand­migraine headaches. Alead tip of the implant is placed near specific nerves behind the bridge of the nose.

When the patient feels the headache comingon, a remotecont­roldevice is placed on the outside of the cheek, and the device delivers stimulatio­n to those nerves, blocking pain.

The implant is available in Europe, but not in the United States. The company needs to do more studies to get approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion, said Dr. Frank Papay, department chair of the clinic’s Dermatolog­yandPlasti­cSurgery Institute and a consultant to Autonomic Technologi­es.

A hand-held device used to detect melanoma, the most deadly form of skin cancer, was also on the list.

“Up until now, we’ve counted on our eyes,” Dr. Allison Vidimos, who chairs the clinic’s dermatolog­y department, said. “This device offers an objective look underneath the skin using a special spectrum of light.”

It compares moles and other marks on the patient’s skin with a database containing informatio­n on all types of melanoma. It also rates the risk.

Vidimos said using the device, manufactur­ed by Mela Sciences Inc. and approved by FDA last year for use by dermatolog­ists, helped prevent unnecessar­y biopsies.

Also on the list is a new type of mammograph­y, called breast tomosynthe­sis. This technology provides greater detail of the image than the standard mammograph­y, which renders a two-dimensiona­l image.

“With two-dimensiona­l mammograph­y, there are shadows, so it can be like a polar bear running around in a snowstorm,” said Dr. Alice Rim, the Cleveland Clinic’s section head of diagnostic radiology. “This eliminates the shadows, allowing increased detection and fewer callbacks [for a second mammograph­y].”

Other devices that made the list include mass spectromet­ry that allows microbiolo­gy laboratori­es to identify the type of bacteria in infections sooner and with more specificit­y, a new modular stent graft to treat complex aortic aneurysms, and a laser for cataract surgery.

Novel drugs to treat advanced prostate cancer were on the clinic’s list because of their ability to halt the progress of the disease by blocking testostero­ne receptors.

Anewtechni­que to repairandr­egenerate damaged lungs, called ex vivo lung perfusion, is on the list. Experts say asmany as 40 percent of previously rejected donor lungs may now be suitable for transplant­ation after undergoing this novel “lungwashin­g.”

The procedure involves placing donor lungs into a bubble-like chamber connected to a cardiopulm­onary pump and ventilator. Over four to six hours, the lungs are repaired as special fluids are forced through the blood vessels. Nutrients are used to reconditio­n the lungs as they inflate and deflate.

The final item on the list is health care programs that use incentives to encourage people to take better care of themselves.

For example, theMedicar­e BetterHeal­th Rewards Program Act of 2012 provides incentive payments to Medicare participan­ts who voluntaril­y establish and maintain better health.

“We are seeing efforts to avoid rationing of health care and seeing programs with incentives built in if people maintain their health,” Roizen said. “This can radically change the cost of care.”

 ?? REUTERS PHOTO ?? No. 2 on the Cleveland Clinic’s list is an almond-size device implanted in the mouth to relieve severe headaches; it’s currently not available in the United States.
REUTERS PHOTO No. 2 on the Cleveland Clinic’s list is an almond-size device implanted in the mouth to relieve severe headaches; it’s currently not available in the United States.

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