Mom’s melanoma leads to Israeli device for early detection

Ofir Aharon invented a new technology and put it into a patented scanner that shows early deterioration of skin lesions before they become pigmented.

By Abigail Klein Leichman, Israel21c

Ofir Aharon was in the last year of his PhD studies in electro-optics when his mother was diagnosed with melanoma.

Learning all he could about this deadly form of skin cancer, Aharon came to the conclusion that more than half of malignant melanoma lesions (usually, moles) fail to be diagnosed in the first two years after they appear – at a stage when treatment could be lifesaving.

“Physicians say 50 percent of skin cancer starts out ‘innocent’ and then becomes cancer, but pathologists familiar with tissue structure say 95% of lesions that look innocent already started as cancer. I wondered why there was no tool that could show the early deterioration of lesions much before they became pigmented,” Aharon tells ISRAEL21c.

“I saw a vacuum here. I knew that something is happening underneath the skin if it’s becoming cancer.”

Aharon talked to dermatology and electro-optics experts about his idea for scanning subdermal skin lesions from different optical fields and using algorithms to extract the differences between the images in order to quantify slight distortions.

“My friends said, ‘If you want to do a mitzvah for your mother, take it to the whole world.’ And then I got into business,” Aharon recalls.

In 2015, he left his job as a researcher at KLA-Tencor to give his full attention to developing the scanner and the algorithms through his startup, Scade Medical, (https://scademedical.com) in a home lab tested by the Israeli Chief Scientist and the Singapore Israel Industrial R&D Foundation (SIIRD).

The startup’s patented prototype scanner, BlueSky, is based on DOSI (differential optical spectro-polarimetric imaging) technology that Aharon invented. He says it provides real-time data not otherwise available to dermatologists.

Seven lives saved in clinical trials

In preliminary clinical studies at Soroka Medical Center in Beersheva, DOSI technology achieved a 100 percent detection rate in 77 skin lesions. A proof-of-concept (POC) study of 139 lesions, carried out in five clinics in Jerusalem, Rome and Texas, showed nearly 92% specificity and 100% sensitivity.

The new method proved about four times better than the current histology method of standard dermoscopy, says Aharon.

“We’ve already saved seven lives at the clinics where we tested our device,” he says.

“One 25-year-old woman who agreed to participate in a DOSI scan said she had a mole on her leg for many years. They scanned it with my machine and I saw a distortion.”

Although five dermatologists believed the mole to be harmless, Aharon persuaded them to remove it for closer examination.

“It turned out to be melanoma in an advanced stage. In another few weeks the tissue would have metastasized. Without the DOSI method she would be dead now,” says Aharon.

Prof. Avner Shemer, a senior dermatologist at Sheba Medical Center in Tel HaShomer, says he believes the BlueSky prototype shows great potential for helping dermatologists make a more certain melanoma diagnosis and could even be used at home by patients to check their own moles.

“Every other day, patients come to my clinic asking to be screened for skin cancer,” Shemer tells ISRAEL21c. The primary tool to do this is a dermoscope, but a biopsy is needed if a mark looks suspicious.

“Ofir’s invention is the first dynamic dermoscope,” he says. “It sees polarized ions inside the mole that move differently than in a benign mole. It’s a unique system and it’s very smart.”

A $1 billion market

According to the World Health Organization, about 132,000 new cases of melanoma are diagnosed worldwide each year. Melanoma kills an estimated one American every hour and is particularly prevalent in Australia and New Zealand. These are three of the seven countries in which DOSI is patented.

Scade Medical is led by a multidisciplinary team of entrepreneurs and executives from the medical-device industry, together with an advisory board of dermatologists and surgeons. Dr. Leon Gilead, a senior skin surgeon at Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem, is the company’s medical director.

In order to reach Aharon’s goal of becoming the gold standard for early detection of melanoma, Scade Medical is forming a board of directors and preparing to raise between $3 million and $5 million to further develop the BlueSky prototype and begin clinical trials for approval of the FDA (US), CE (Europe) and MDSAP (Canada).

Aharon says the total addressable market for dermatology devices is more than $1 billion in the US alone.

He sees a range of potential additional uses for the hand-held scanner, which is planned to have an adapter for use with a smartphone connected to a cloud serving as the database for artificial intelligence (AI) to detect new patterns of skin cancer.

“The technology also has the potential to mark lesion margins, thus avoiding unnecessary repeated excision procedures, scarring, and skin implants,” he explains.

“At a third stage, Scade will expand its first clinical indication to encompass non-melanoma skin cancers. Finally, Scade will launch the regulatory approved home device, which will promote self-examination and early treatment of skin cancer by enabling dermatologists to follow their patients’ distortions on their own terms and time.”

The company has initiated preliminary discussions with potential key opinion leaders from the US, Germany, France, Italy, England and Israel and is seeking collaborations across the world.

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