Screening for cancer may become as easy as putting on a bra, or swallowing a pill. Recently, 18-year-old Julian Rios Cantu, from Mexico, won first place at the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards (GSEA), for inventing a bra that is able to detect breast cancer. The bra, which has been deemed EVA, was created primarily for women with a genetic predisposition to cancer. It incorporates roughly 200 biosensors that map the surface of the breast, monitoring changes in shape, weight and temperature. Using a bra as a platform for the sensors allows monitoring of the breasts while they are in the same position for prolonged periods of time. It doesn’t have to be worn everyday, about one hour a week is sufficient.
EVA
The biosensors determine thermal conductivity within certain zones of the breast, indicating areas of increased blood flow, which is typical of the neovascularization of cancer. The sensors analyze the data collected, sending it to an application on any computer. This technology could drastically change the early detection of breast cancer, and potentially save many women’s lives, allowing them to receive treatment much earlier than otherwise.
Cytosponge
Another cancer screening tool that is making its way to market screens for esophageal cancer using a small sponge on the end of a string. Esophageal cancer has approximately 18% 5-year survival rate, due to its often late diagnosis. The current standard for screening esophageal cancer is by endoscopy, but the “cytosponge” could be changing that. Packaged in a small capsule, on the end of a string, the cytosponge is a small sponge that is swallowed by the patient. As the capsule is broken down by stomach acid the sponge is then pulled up the esophagus, collecting cellular material for lab analysis. The procedure doesn’t take very long, is minimally invasive, requiring no anesthetic or sedation medication, and generally accurate. More research and fine-tuning of the test need to be made before it is available for wider use.
Cancer Screening Tools = Wave of the Future
Cancer screening tools, which are available for use either at home or in primary care settings, could be the wave of the future. More and more people want to take health-care and monitoring into their own hands, and these types of tools allow for that. Even when these tools are used in a primary care setting, they give the patient an increased sense of control over their health care, as they will not need additional appointments, referral processes, which can become complicated, and create the feeling of being trapped in a never ending system; they’re also fast and easy.
Node Smith, associate editor for NDNR, is a fifth year naturopathic medical student at NUNM, where he has been instrumental in maintaining a firm connection to the philosophy and heritage of naturopathic medicine amongst the next generation of docs. He helped found the first multi-generational experiential retreat, which brings elders, alumni, and students together for a weekend campout where naturopathic medicine and medical philosophy are experienced in nature. Three years ago he helped found the non-profit, Association for Naturopathic ReVitalization (ANR), for which he serves as the board chairman. ANR has a mission to inspire health practitioners to embody the naturopathic principles through experiential education. Node also has a firm belief that the next era of naturopathic medicine will see a resurgence of in-patient facilities which use fasting, earthing, hydrotherapy and homeopathy to bring people back from chronic diseases of modern living; he is involved in numerous conversations and projects to bring about this vision.