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Cutting Edge: Surgical advancement through research
Before the bright lights of the operating room are turned on and the surgeons and operating room staff are gowned and ready, research conducted at Lawson Health Research Institute has backed many of the surgical innovations and firsts performed at London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
On October 5, Lawson hosted a Café Scientifique event where a panel of surgeons who are also Lawson scientists discussed their cutting-edge work. Guests had the opportunity to ask questions as part of an open-forum discussion to gain insights from the speakers, and from one another.
In celebration of Canada’s 150th anniversary as a nation, this event was the second of a two-part series focusing on the future vision for health care in Canada and the legacy that research at Lawson will leave. Research and knowledge-creation have been a hallmark of the various surgical areas at LHSC and St. Joseph’s since their inception, and the relationship between innovation and improving patient care has been an enduring trademark. Surgeon scientists have conducted and published research that has changed clinical practice worldwide.
Hand surgery: How small advances turn into complex surgical achievements
Dr. Bing Siang Gan, Lawson scientist, plastic surgeon, Hand and Upper Limb Centre, St. Joseph's
Dr. Gan has a particular research interest in the biology and treatment of Dupuytren's contracture and he uses conventional as well as minimal invasive procedures such as needle aponeurotomy and new collagenase enzyme injections to treat patients.
Dr. Gan explained how a better surgical understanding of Dupuytren's contracture combined with an understanding of the underlying gene factors, DNA, RNA, proteins, receptors, and collagen formation of the condition has led to pharmacological treatment options. The next step will be developing treatment options at every stage of Dupuytren's contracture to keep patients away from the operating room.
Transplant organ preservation: The best option may be “Stinky”
Dr. Alp Sener, Lawson scientist, transplant surgeon, Multi-organ Transplant Program, LHSC
Dr. Sener maintains an active basic sciences and translational research laboratory focusing on gasotransmitter biology and therapeutics. Dr. Sener discussed the need to use “marginal” deceased donor kidneys - those from older donors, younger donors with existing medical issues, and donors post circulatory death – to treat end stage renal disease because due to a lack of donor supply.
Dr. Sener’s laboratory pioneered the use of hydrogen sulphide, a colourless gas with a strong “rotten egg” odor, to prolong organ storage, improve kidney re-perfusion, decrease dangerous inflammatory cells, promote quicker kidney function recovery, greater urine output and improve recipient survival.
Computer-assisted gastrointestinal surgery: Why can’t they see what I see?
Dr. Christopher Schlachta, Lawson scientist, medical director, Canadian Surgical Technologies and Advanced Robotics (CSTAR), LHSC
Dr. Schlachta’s current research interests are focused on development of computer-assisted surgical techniques and technologies to enhance care and training. Dr. Schlachta demonstrated how computer-assisted technologies in the operating room can enhance communication among surgeons and trainees to produce better outcomes for patients. He is currently partnering with industry to commercialize operating room technology he and a team of engineers at CSTAR have developed.
See more photos from this Café Scientifique on Lawson's Facebook page.
Cyclotron hits 10,000-bombardment milestone
Cyclotron staff at St. Joseph’s Health Care London have recorded a 10,000-mark milestone in the same understated way they work every day to improve patient care and cutting-edge research.
No balloons, no streamers, no fanfare: Just an efficient note atop a printout as the bombardment number spun past 9,999 in the early hours of Dec. 31.
“It’s taken us 15 years to get to this point and our work continues to grow,” says Michael Kovacs, PhD, Lead of Lawson’s Nordal Cyclotron & PET Radiochemistry Facility and Leader of the Imaging Research Program at Lawson Research Institute, the innovation arm of St. Joseph’s.
“The numbers are great but the real satisfaction is knowing every single bombardment means something important to a patient or a researcher working towards better patient health.”
St. Joseph’s GE PETtrace cyclotron is a particle accelerator that produces radioisotopes for use in positron emission tomography (PET) scans across Southwestern Ontario, from Windsor to Toronto. It is a vital tool for ultra-precise cancer diagnoses and for advanced research into scores of diseases.
In patient care, each “bombardment” – a grouping of radioisotopes that are then lab-processed, tested and made into smaller batches – can be used to aid cancer scans for as many as 25 people.
“A precise scan can make a dramatic difference, a life-changing difference, in how someone’s cancer is diagnosed and custom-managed,” Kovacs says. “If we think of the PET scanner as the engine of that transformative work, the cyclotron’s radioisotopes are its rocket fuel.”
Isotopes injected into patients are designed to have a short radioactive half-life – between two minutes and 110 minutes – which is another reason St. Joseph’s cyclotron is such an asset for timely care in the region.
“You can’t store or stockpile them. You have to use them almost immediately, so it’s essential to local and area hospital centres to have a ready, reliable source nearby,” Kovacs says.
About half the batched bombardments are used in patients to help with clinical diagnoses that will guide doctors’ treatment decisions.
The other half are used for research trials and pre-clinical research through Lawson, in fields as diverse as oncology, cardiology, neurology, psychiatry, metabolic disease and infectious diseases. In one promising study, for example, they’re being used to image specific brain proteins as researchers explore new disease-modifying treatment pathways for Alzheimer disease.
The next burgeoning field, Kovacs says, is theranostics: the science of diagnosing cancer and precision-attacking it at the same time. “That’s exciting for me, to be able simultaneously to see what we treat and treat what we see.”
About 15 highly specialized staff work at St. Joseph’s cyclotron facility, plus PhD-candidate researchers and other trainees.
Generous donors through St. Joseph’s Health Care Foundation have made much of this advanced research and next-level technology a reality. During the past few years, the Foundation granted nearly $800,000 in donor support to fund extensive renovations to the facility, making it possible to increase production of isotopes and expand life-saving care. Recently, $1 million in donations supported a new PET/CT scanner – the heart of Canada’s first national GE centre of excellence in molecular imaging and theranostics being developed at St. Joseph’s Hospital.
“We know the cyclotron is a critical tool in our imaging work and we are grateful to those donors who stepped up to help us with renovations that enabled the doubling of our facility’s production capability,” says Michelle Campbell, President and CEO of St. Joseph’s Health Care Foundation. “This renovation helps keep St. Joseph’s imaging program at the cutting edge of clinical care.”
The 40-tonne, room-sized cyclotron is more than a machine, and more than the experts who process, test, ship and use the radioisotopes, Kovacs notes.
It’s also testament to the vision of St. Joseph’s long-time chief medical physicist Frank Prato, PhD, and to the support of hospital administrators who saw its need and potential, he adds.
“We are innovators, and our vision is that we’re going to expand St. Joseph’s imaging expertise on an even larger world stage,” Kovacs says.
Database funding could improve diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer
A $125,000 grant from the Canadian Cancer Society will help create a database of PET/CT (positron emission tomography/computed tomography) and PET/MR (magnetic resonance) images of prostate cancer. The hope is that this database will be used to help improve diagnosis and treatment of men with prostate cancer.
The scans use radiopharmaceuticals to target prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a transmembrane protein commonly found on prostate cancer cells.
“The idea behind this grant is to put together a database of PSMA PET/CT and PET/MR scans with annotated findings so medical professionals can scroll through cases and see the sites of prostate cancer. Our hope is this will help clinicians learn how to interpret these scans and ultimately help them to make informed treatment decisions for their patients,” says Dr. Katherine Zukotynski, Adjunct Scientist at Lawson Health Research Institute and lead researcher on the project.
The use of PSMA PET/CT and PET/MR scans in clinical practice is relatively new and currently only accessible through clinical trials. In fact, the first PSMA PET/MR scan in Canada was performed at St. Joseph’s Health Care London in 2016 by Dr. Glenn Bauman, Lawson Scientist and Radiation Oncologist at the London Regional Cancer Program at London Health Sciences Centre. Dr. Bauman is also part of this database project.
Studies have found these scans more accurately detect sites of prostate cancer than earlier imaging techniques, which then helps inform treatment decisions.
Dr. Zukotynski explains, “If you have an idea of the amount of disease and where it is located, and you can correlate it with prognosis, this could be very helpful. It might also allow physicians to compare current patients with patients who have similar findings, which may help determine the best therapies to try.”
There is hope that eventually this same database could lead to the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to assist in diagnosis and treatment planning.
“PSMA PET/CT and PET/MR may be tools helpful to categorize the total burden of disease, and then establish how that disease changes with therapy. Our first step down this path is to assemble a database that can be used both for research and educational purposes.”
The database will include data from centres across Canada, with a number of researchers contributing to the project funded by the Canadian Cancer Society.
Other principal investigators include: Dr. Bauman; Dr. François Bénard of the BC Cancer Research Institute; Dr. Vincent Gaudet, University of Waterloo; Dr. Phil Kuo, University of Arizona; Dr. Cynthia Ménard, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Montreal; and Dr. Ur Metser of the Princess Margaret Hospital. Dr. Carlos Uribe of the BC Cancer Research Centre and Dr. Aaron Ward of Lawson are co-applicants for the grant.
This is the part three of a three-part series on PSMA PET imaging research. Check out part one and two.
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Lawson Health Research Institute
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Dementia research hits the ‘mark’
St. Joseph’s Health Care London is at the forefront of national research exploring biomarkers to better predict dementia and slow its onset.
Dr. Michael Borrie is now seeing grandchildren of patients who came to his clinic when he first started Alzheimer’s research 30 years ago.
His message to this new generation is more hopeful than ever, bolstered by ever-more-reliable ways of early detection and being tantalizingly close to a future of predicting dementia and intervening even before symptoms appear.
“The ultimate goal is to slow cognitive decline – and to stop it if we can – so that people can live independently, and happier, for a lot longer,” says Borrie, Medical Director of the Aging Brain and Memory Clinic at St. Joseph’s Health Care London (St. Joseph’s).
“We’re aiming to alter the trajectory of dementia,” he says.
A geriatrician, clinician and researcher, Borrie is also Platform Lead for the Comprehensive Assessment of Neurodegeneration and Dementia (COMPASS-ND), a long-term study within the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration and Aging (CCNA).
Recently, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research announced $20.6 million in funding to continue the work of CCNA, a 30-site, multi-pronged project of which the St. Joseph’s-based team is the lead player. The grant will enable them to advance the frontiers of dementia research to benefit real-world patients here and across the country.
Solving mysteries with biomarkers
Despite the prevalence of Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases – and with more than 10,000 new diagnoses in Canada each year – there are still many mysteries to solve: Why do some people have early-onset dementia while others, super-agers, remain alert and active in their 90s? What’s happening genetically, in their environment and personal medical history to advance or protect against the disease?
What is known, however, is the link between damaged nerve cells and specific proteins that misfold and clump together to form amyloid plaques and tau tangles in the brain. Detecting these abnormal proteins early is an important key to diagnosis and prediction.
Locally, the most comprehensive tool has been state-of-the-art brain Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scanning at St. Joseph’s Imaging. Lawson researchers are also involved in reliably detecting amyloid proteins by analyzing participants’ cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) – a surprisingly accurate way of confirming imaging results, says geriatrician Dr. Jaspreet Bhangu, a Lawson scientist and head of the biomarker project.
Through the BioMIND regional research project, Lawson scientists are analyzing PET scans, blood and CSF samples to check for specific protein biomarkers. If shown to be reliable, a series of these tests over time could signal whether the disease is progressing, and could predict whether it will progress or respond to treatment.
All that gets added to an arsenal that includes tests of behaviour, memory and cognitive function.
“It’s a triple assessment, or even a quadruple one, that we can conduct over time. We hope to use these advanced tests to provide vital information, similar to what is done in certain types of cancer,” Bhangu says.
But that’s not all.
Testing potential treatments
St. Joseph’s is also one of the country’s most active sites for clinical trials into whether novel medications might be able to directly pinpoint and destroy the proteins that cause Alzheimer disease.
“This is the intersection of cutting-edge research, top-notch resources and excellent clinical practice to develop personalized treatments,” says Bhangu. “What makes us unique in Canada among dementia researchers is that our science is taking us from bench to bedside – a rapid turnaround from research to direct patient benefit.”
If a person has a strong family history of Alzheimer disease and no symptoms – but does have positive biomarkers confirming presence of disease – they may then choose to take part in a randomized controlled trial to try to alter the trajectory of the disease.
“It’s still in a research context, still in clinical trials – but if Health Canada ultimately approves a treatment, we’ll have the ability and the patient database to be able to translate our findings into clinical practice much more quickly instead of waiting for years,” says Borrie.
All this is good news for a generation eager for answers, Borrie says.
“When we learn more about the mechanisms of the disease, we can find more effective, earlier treatments. And if we can treat people earlier, we hope to move the disease progression curve to the right, to add more years of good cognitive health to someone’s life.”