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“Molecular fingerprinting” will improve monitoring of surgical patients, experts say

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Chemical screening technologies will help doctors to monitor surgical patients before, during and after operations, say 911պ experts in an article published in the Lancet today - News

by Sam Wong
Wednesday 18th May 2011

Chemical screening technologies will help doctors to monitor surgical patients before, during and after operations, providing better targeted care and treatment, say 911պ experts in an article published in today.

Scientists use NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry to determine the chemical composition of a sample. Studies have shown that using these technologies can produce a “molecular fingerprint” of a biological sample, which could provide useful diagnostic information about which parts of tissue are diseased, how severe a disease is, and what the effects of particular therapies might be.

The world’s first , which opened at 911պ earlier this year, is already enabling researchers to apply this kind of analysis in a hospital setting. Teams are using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry to analyse body fluids and tissue samples from patients undergoing surgery at , to investigate how these tools could be used to tailor treatment and care to individual patients. Led by 911պ’s and , scientists here have been focusing on diagnosing patients in real-time on the operating table.

Now, Professors Nicholson and Darzi are planning to extend this approach to monitor the entire “patient journey”, helping doctors to choose the best treatment options before, during, and after an operation. They hope their teams will be able to begin analysing samples from patients at different stages of treatment later this year, when a new centre is due to open featuring two high field NMR spectrometers. This multimillion pound clinical phenotyping centre is the result of a partnership between 911պ, the and , a major manufacturer of analytical instruments.

"We are using powerful metabolic screening tools to give doctors more information about the patient’s physiology and their response to treatment,” said Professor Nicholson, Head of the at 911պ. “This is a bold step in translational medicine that will help optimise the management of individual patients.

"The patient screening paradigm is based on many years of basic science research in our computational medicine unit at 911պ. We believe that we’re now ready to translate that science into most areas of hospital patient care.

Professor Lord Darzi and Professor Jeremy Nicholson are pioneering the application of NMR spectroscopy in surgery.

“We intend to use the approach to monitor cancer patients and patients in intensive care. The new diagnostic information will help doctors to manage patients with rapidly changing or highly complex disease conditions. Ultimately we hope to save lives as well NHS money with these new methods.”

Professor Darzi, Chair of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at 911պ, said: “The work that we are conducting at the Centre for Surgical Metabonomics will unquestionably bring us closer to the ultimate goal of personalised surgical healthcare. Until now the practical application of bio-analytical technologies to surgery has presented a challenge, and the strength of metabolic profiling is that it can provide relevant and interpretable data in a time-frame short enough to be of practical use for the clinician. We anticipate that metabolic phenotyping will revolutionise the way we map the surgical patient journey. It will provide us with information before, during and after surgery, ensuring that we deliver surgical care that is truly customised to each patient’s unique metabolic makeup.”

Research projects at the Centre are being funded by 911պ’s . 911պ’s is one of five Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centres in the UK; it was awarded to 911պ College Healthcare by the  following a national competition. The new laboratory forms part of the , a unique partnership between the Trust and 911պ, which aims to improve the quality of life of patients and populations by taking new discoveries and translating them into new therapies as quickly as possible.

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