Robotic clothing and ‘listening’ for cancer among new projects

An example of imaging using near infra-red light cameras to highlight vasculature in the human placenta beyond the capabilities of the naked eye.

Five new research projects aim to transform healthcare through the development and application of revolutionary new technologies.

Supported by a £118 million investment, including £54 million from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), they include:

  • developing tech such as robotic clothing that ‘puts itself on and takes itself off’ and wearable devices to prevent falls. It will address the needs of the 6.7 million people in the UK with age or disability-related mobility issues
  • creating low-cost, portable devices to detect the early signs of cancer by ‘listening’ for soundwaves and using optical tools
  • developing a new approach for the administration of drugs to treat conditions ranging from high blood pressure to diabetes and asthma. It would require a single dose that would last for weeks or even months
  • speeding up and reducing the time required to bring new drugs to market by testing using microdosing. Microdosing is an approach that sees a tiny amount of a drug delivered to a small part of the body
  • overcoming barriers to the use of mesenchymal stem cells to help tissue regeneration to repair broken bones and in chemotherapy, where they can help to regenerate healthy bone marrow

Life-changing technologies

UK Science Minister, Lord Vallance, said:

These innovative technologies have the potential to improve patient care in the UK and around the world.

By investing in this research, we are enabling scientists to develop life-changing technologies.

By working closely with patients, healthcare professionals, engineers and industry partners, these advances can be translated into practical solutions that will improve the lives of people with age-related mobility issues, cancer, and other chronic conditions.

Wealth of expertise

EPSRC Executive Chair Professor Charlotte Deane said:

The five new hubs bring together a wealth of expertise from across academia, industry and charities to improve population health, transform disease prediction and diagnosis, and accelerate the development of new interventions.

They represent an exciting range of adventurous techniques and approaches that have great potential to improving the lives of millions of people here in the UK and across the world.

World-leading programme

Each hub will deliver a world-leading research programme focused on advancing and developing novel engineering and physical sciences research.

To ensure their research has maximum impact each hub will work with patients, people with lived experience and health professionals.

They will work with a wide range of partners including:

  • the NHS
  • charities such as Age UK and Cancer Research UK
  • pharmaceutical companies
  • small and medium-sized enterprises

131 partners will provide £64 million of cash and in-kind support in addition to the £54 million EPSRC investment.

Further information

Healthcare hub summaries

Optical and Acoustic Imaging for Surgical and Interventional Sciences (OASIS) Hub

Led by: Professor Danail Stoyanov, UCL

EPSRC funding: £11 million

Partners:

  • Imperial College London
  • University of Cambridge

Partner funding (cash and in-kind): £6.1 million

Every year around 375,000 people are diagnosed with cancer in the UK and more than 50% will undergo surgical interventions.

However, the imaging tools we currently use to identify the earliest signs of cancer and aid surgery are limited to replicating human vision which cannot always distinguish important details in images.

This means that signs of cancer can be missed in surveillance and diagnosis, and in treatment an inability to remove all cancerous tissue and a likelihood of a need for further surgery.

The OASIS hub aims to develop low-cost, portable devices to identify and visualise cancer using optical, acoustic and photoacoustic imaging.

The hub will bring together partners from across academia, industry and the NHS to accelerate the development and clinical use of these technologies.

It will pave the way for clinical trials and establish new datasets with the aim of making effective and less invasive interventions available to everyone in the UK.

Research and Partnership Hub in Microscale Science and Technology to Accelerate Therapeutic Innovation (MicroTex)

Led by: Professor Ian Underwood, The University of Edinburgh

EPSRC funding: £11 million

Partners:

  • Heriot-Watt University
  • University of Bath
  • Ballie Gifford, LifeArc (Charity and Rare Respiratory Diseases Centre)
  • Heriot-Watt University

Partner funding (cash and in-kind): £16.6 million

Lung infection and inflammation is one of the world’s leading causes of illness and death.

But the discovery of potential new therapies and proving the efficacy of these in humans is costly and time-consuming, typically taking more than 10 years and costing more than $1 billion.

A potential solution exists in the form of Intra Target Microdosing (ITM), an approach which involves:

  • administering tiny amounts of multiple drugs to a microscopically small part of the lung
  • bypassing animal models of disease
  • measuring the therapeutic benefit in diseased tissues with no wider risk to the subject

ITM has been used to identify promising therapies for solid tumours and can quickly and efficiently reject poor candidate drugs and raise confidence in more promising drugs at an early stage.

This dramatically increases the efficiency of drug development, producing substantial reductions in time, resource and cost.

The use of ITM for lung infection and inflammation has the potential to transform therapy development and brings a significant technological challenge.

The MicroTex hub aims to create and test the techniques that will deliver, measure and sample precise microdoses at specific locations in the lung.

The VIVO Hub for Enhanced Independent Living

Led by: Professor Jonathan Rossiter, University of Bristol

EPSRC funding: £11 million

Partners:

  • Bristol Health Partners
  • Health Innovation West of England
  • International Society for Prosthetics and Orthotics
  • NHS Bristol North Somerset and South Gloucestershire Integrated Care Board
  • British Standard Institution
  • Foster + Partners
  • AGE WELL Inc
  • Caafi Health
  • Right At Home
  • Milbotix Ltd
  • Sooothe
  • International Consortium of Rehabilitation Robotics
  • NHS Lanarkshire
  • Ottobock
  • Lillian Faithful Care
  • Dorothy House Hospice Care
  • Sirona Care and Health
  • Medigarments Ltd
  • Kyoto University
  • Academic Centre for Computing and Media Studies
  • National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration West
  • The Research Institute for the Care of Older People
  • Laboratory of Intelligent Systems
  • Age UK Bristol
  • National Manufacturing Institute Scotland
  • Parkinson’s UK
  • Guardian Robot Project, RIKEN
  • Royal Free Charity NHS Foundation Trust
  • PAL Technologies Ltd
  • British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists
  • Meta Reality Labs
  • North Bristol Trust
  • National Composites Centre
  • SWAG: Soft Wearable Assistive Garments for Human Empowerment
  • Horizon Europe

Partner funding (cash and in-kind): £847,000

More than 6.7 million people in the UK have age or disability-related mobility issues.

This leads to a loss of independence and reliance on stretched health and care services, a problem that will only increase due to the UK’s ageing population.

The hub will work with the NHS, charities and care providers.

It aims to develop the healthcare technologies required to directly address the mobility and independence issues of this large population where it’s needed. On their bodies, in their homes and in the communities and environments where they live and socialise.

These will include:

  • robotic clothing that ‘puts itself on and takes itself off’
  • wearable devices to combat orthostatic hypertension, therefore preventing falls
  • wearable robotic assistance systems using digital monitoring to support sitting-to-stand, stair climbing and safe standing
  • systems such as lightweight, on-body energy storage and power delivery systems to allow full independence outside of the home while still using these new tools

MAINSTREAM research and partnership hub for health technologies in manufacturing stem cells

Led by: Professor Matthew Dalby, University of Glasgow

EPSRC funding: £11 million

Partners:

  • NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
  • EPSRC Cellular Agriculture Manufacturing Hub (CARMA) Hub
  • InnoScot Health
  • Zimmer and Peacock
  • Blood Cancer UK
  • Alliance Scotland
  • BMF Biotechnology
  • Schaefer
  • Impact Solutions
  • Histocell
  • British Hip Society
  • DRK-Blutspendedienst
  • UoNano GmbH
  • Henry Royce Institute
  • IBioIC
  • Cytonome
  • Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult
  • Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service
  • EPSRC CMAC Hub
  • LGC
  • RegenCTC
  • Centre for Process Innovation
  • Cancer Research UK
  • FRAME
  • EuroCGT
  • Cell Guidance Systems
  • NHS Innovation Hub
  • Nikon
  • CrestOptics
  • L’Oreal
  • National Manufactoring Institute Scotland
  • N8 Research Partnership
  • Leeds Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit

Partner funding (cash and in-kind): £1.5 million

Mesenchymal stromal or stem cells (MSCs) are adult stem cells that can turn into bone, cartilage, ligament, tendon and fat-forming cells, with far-reaching potential for tissue regeneration to repair broken bones, for example.

They can be used as a drug to prevent transplant rejection.

Their role in the development of blood cancers means they have potential to complement chemotherapy in regenerating healthy bone marrow and looking after normal blood cells provided by bone marrow transplants.

Despite their massive potential in healthcare provision and the fact that the first MSC-based clinical trial took place more than 25 years ago, MSC therapies are still not commonly used.

This is due to the difficulty in growing them outside of the body.

It means that only relatively few can be grown from each donor, which keeps the price high and prevents production from being scaled up.

MAINSTREAM aims to address this problem through the development of materials that tell MSCs to retain their key characteristics in an artificial environment, allowing them to be manufacturing in large numbers.

It will lead the development of novel materials that act in the same way as the places in the body the cells grow to allow us to produce enough cells for cellular therapies.

It will also identify how to scale-up the technologies using approaches such as 3D printing needed to allow future medicines to be manufactured affordably and sustainably.

National Hub for Advanced Long-acting Therapeutics (HALo)

Led by: Professor Steve Rannard, University of Liverpool

EPSRC funding: £11 million

Partner funding (cash and in-kind): £49.1 million

People are well known to struggle with taking regular medicines both for prevention of disease or treatment of acute or chronic conditions.

Taking medication once or several times a day can become a burden, and medicines cannot deliver their intended benefits if doses are missed.

This can lead to complications ranging from a lack of efficacy to pathogen resistance.

An alternative approach is Long-Acting Therapeutics (LATs), which sees a single administered dose delivering the right amount of drug required for weeks or even months.

This approach has been proven to be successful in the management of HIV and mental health conditions, with potential to protect against malaria also recently demonstrated.

LATs have the potential to simplify the administration of drugs, improve clinical outcomes and reduce the costs of healthcare provision.

The HALo team will bring academia together with pharmaceutical companies to understand the physical science underpinning successful LAT medicines.

They will create proof-of-concept medicines for diseases without LAT options, and drive the UK pathway from research to clinically available therapies.

Top image:  An example of imaging using near infra-red light cameras to highlight vasculature in the human placenta beyond the capabilities of the naked eye. Credit: UCL

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