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Completed SBIR-STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Development of a novel visualization, labeling, communication and tracking engine for human anatomy.

$3.87M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Am Operating Llc
Country United States
Start Date Sep 15, 2023
End Date Aug 31, 2024
Duration 351 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10761060
Grant Description

The key to tracking, collating, and communicating skin cancer data is standardization, enhanced precision, and categorization of anatomic descriptions. Imprecise and non-standardized labeling of anatomic sites for skin cancer biopsies creates challenges in communicating and identifying the skin cancer location at the time of treatment. Diagnostic biopsies often remove

the visible cancer cells, and since skin cancer most commonly arises on sun- or radiation-damaged skin with numerous surrounding or contiguous discolorations, lesions, and scars, the biopsy site can be difficult to find. Furthermore, photos are not always taken at time of biopsy or are not readily available at time of surgery, and most Electronic Health Record

(EHR) systems rely on free-text labeling of anatomic sites. This project aims to create methods to document reproducible and standardized anatomic site descriptions of skin cancer locations, to visualize skin cancer locations, and to attach data related to skin cancers at each affected anatomic site. The anatomic site descriptions are also enhanced with standardized directional

modifiers for increased accuracy and precision, thereby creating a linguistic global position system (GPS) for the human body. The project involves a simplified process to attach skin cancer diagnoses and diagnostic codes to standardized anatomic sites with enhanced descriptions and visualizations across the skin surface topography. Precise and standardized

anatomic labeling with corresponding visualizations will facilitate communication between clinics, increase clinical accuracy and efficiency, and enhance patient safety and understanding by reducing the risk of wrong-site surgery for skin cancer. The project also integrates functionality to securely send files including high resolution, color skin cancer photos and

corresponding anatomic map visualizations linked to standardized anatomy descriptions through email, thus mitigating the need to communicate photos and records over poor-quality fax methods or postal mail, while simultaneously maintaining compliance with regulatory statutes.

All Grantees

Am Operating Llc

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