Cleveland Clinic Researcher Receives $3 2 Million NIH Grant To Develop Bio-Artificial Kidney

Released on: October 5, 2007, 10:58 pm

Press Release Author: Cleveland Clinic

Industry: Healthcare

Press Release Summary: Shuvo Roy, Ph.D., of Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research
Institute to develop alternative to dialysis using silicon nanotechnology



Press Release Body: The National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
awarded Shuvo Roy, Ph.D., a $3.2 million, three-year grant today to develop a
bio-artificial kidney that can be used instead of dialysis.

Dr. Roy and his team are using MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) technology to
create an implantable, self-regulating bio-artificial kidney that will filter toxins
and absorb necessary salts and water like human kidneys. The team includes
physicians and engineers from the Lerner Research Institute's Department of
Biomedical Engineering and Cleveland Clinic's Department of Nephrology.

"We are bringing together the necessary multidisciplinary expertise to focus on
critical technical hurdles to develop an implantable hemofilter and cell bioreactor,
which are the integral components of the bio-artificial kidney," Dr. Roy said.

Martin Schreiber, M.D., Chairman of the Cleveland Clinic's Department of Nephrology
and Hypertension, said the grant will help further one of Cleveland Clinic's key
missions.

\"This award fulfills the first step in developing innovative technology platforms
which offer new hope for extending survival in patients with kidney failure," he
said. "Innovation is one of the hallmarks of the Cleveland Clinic and this project
continues that tradition."

Paul E. DiCorleto, Ph.D., Chairman of Lerner Research Institute added, "A program
like this is an excellent example of our continual efforts to find ways to translate
laboratory-based research into novel therapies and treatments that improve patient
care."

More than 50 million dialysis procedures are performed annually in the U.S,
according to data from the United States Renal Data System. The treatment of choice,
kidney transplant, is severely limited by scarcity of donor organs, such that only
25 percent of patients on the waiting list for a transplant survive long enough to
receive a kidney.

The implantable bioartificial kidney Dr. Roy and his team are developing could
substitute for kidney transplantation, thereby giving hope, independence, and
mobility to more than 300,000 patients presently tethered to thrice-weekly in-center
dialysis. Dr. Roy's grant is one of four awarded by NIBIB's Quantum Grants program.
The overall goal of the NIBIB Quantum Grants program is to make a profound (quantum
level) advance in healthcare by funding research on targeted projects that will
develop new technologies and modalities for the diagnosis, treatment, or prevention
of disease.

About Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute
The Lerner Research Institute is home to all laboratory-based and translational
research at the Cleveland Clinic. Its mission is to understand the causes of human
diseases and to develop new treatments and cures. The Lerner Research Institute is
ranked among the top 10 in NIH funding among all U.S. research institutes for 2006.
About 1,200 people work in research programs focusing on cardiovascular, cancer,
neurologic, musculoskeletal, allergic and immunologic, eye, metabolic, and
infectious disease. The Institute also is an integral part of the Cleveland Clinic
Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University - training the next
generation of physician-scientists.

About Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinic, located in Cleveland, Ohio, is a not-for-profit multispecialty
academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and
education. Cleveland Clinic was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a
vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of
cooperation, compassion and innovation. U.S. News & World Report consistently names
Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation's best hospitals in its annual "America's Best
Hospitals" survey. Approximately 1,800 full-time salaried physicians and researchers
at Cleveland Clinic and Cleveland Clinic Florida represent more than 100 medical
specialties and subspecialties. In 2006, there were 3.1 million outpatient visits to
Cleveland Clinic. Patients came for treatment from every state and from more than 80
countries. There were more than 53,000 hospital admissions to Cleveland Clinic in
2006.

Web Site: www.clevelandclinic.org

Contact Details: Scott Heasley, 216/444-8853

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