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(Editor’s note: this article was originally published on Innovation Origins and is reposted here with their permission.)

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Surgeons are performing increasingly complex operations because they need to remove smaller and smaller tumors. Because of imaging techniques, tumors can be detected at an early stage. “This increases the patient’s chance of survival but also presents a challenge to distinguish the (small) tumor from surrounding healthy tissue during surgical treatment,” says Bram Schermers, CEO and CTO of Sirius Medical.

The tools available for tumor localization were very burdensome for the patient, the surgeon, the hospital, society, and the environment. So, they are developing a better, simpler, and affordable technology at Schermers’ startup.

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1.3 million chickpeas per year

Sirius’ first application is designed for breast-conserving turmoil resections. These are performed about 1.3 million times a year worldwide. “That means finding and removing a tumor about the size of a chickpea 1.3 million times a year,” Schermers said. Sirius is not the only provider in this market, but we are the only company in the world that offers an intuitive, simple and affordable navigation solution for this type of surgery.”

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Click on photo to see the YouTube video.

The Sirius Pintuition localizes breast cancer tumors via a magnetic seed. Schermers developed the idea during his doctoral research at the Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital. Until then, breast-conserving surgery in the early stages of breast cancer was performed with a metal anchor wire. The radiology department inserts this device. Two small hooks attach to the tumor area at the end of that wire. The radiologist uses ultrasound or X-ray to determine the tumor area and places the wire tip into the tumor from the skin. Through that wire, the surgeon cuts away the affected area by following the course of the wire.

Another method is localizing the tumor with a radioactive iodine seed. Less invasive, but many safety requirements must be met in doing so; there is a large barrier to wider acceptance, so wire localization remains the most commonly used method. Schermers discovered that it is also possible to replace the radioactive wire with a magnetic seed. And that became the Sirius Pintuition.