Geraldine Hamilton: Body parts on a chip

TED
3 Dec 201313:24

Summary

TLDRThe video discusses the challenges in drug discovery, highlighting the inefficiency and high costs of current methods like cell cultures and animal testing. It introduces organ-on-a-chip technology, a breakthrough that recreates human organ environments to test drugs more accurately. This innovation enables better predictions of drug efficacy and safety, potentially transforming the pharmaceutical industry. By linking multiple organ chips, researchers aim to create a 'virtual human on a chip,' which could revolutionize personalized medicine and clinical trials, improving drug safety and reducing adverse reactions.

Takeaways

  • 😀 The current drug discovery process is too costly, time-consuming, and often fails to deliver effective treatments.
  • 😀 Traditional testing methods like animal models and cells in dishes are ineffective at predicting how drugs will behave in humans.
  • 😀 The Wyss Institute has developed the organ-on-a-chip technology to mimic the dynamic, mechanical, and biochemical conditions of human organs.
  • 😀 An organ-on-a-chip, such as the lung-on-a-chip, uses human cells and can replicate functions like immune responses and infection fighting.
  • 😀 The lung-on-a-chip can simulate white blood cells detecting and responding to bacterial infection, offering insights into immune responses.
  • 😀 The organ-on-a-chip platform can mimic the behavior of organs like the lung and gut, allowing for more accurate drug testing and disease modeling.
  • 😀 Linking multiple organ chips together can create a 'virtual human on a chip,' which models how drugs affect multiple organs simultaneously.
  • 😀 This technology could revolutionize the pharmaceutical, cosmetics, and environmental industries by enabling safer testing with fewer animal models.
  • 😀 Personalized medicine could be achieved by creating chips based on individual stem cells, helping predict personalized drug reactions.
  • 😀 By using chips to model drug effects on organs like the lungs, liver, heart, and kidneys, the Wyss Institute aims to improve clinical trial efficiency and safety.
  • 😀 The Wyss Institute is working on large-scale manufacturing of these chips to make them accessible to researchers globally, accelerating medical discoveries.

Q & A

  • What is the primary challenge with the current drug discovery and development process?

    -The primary challenge is that the process is too costly, takes too long, and often fails. For every billion dollars spent on R&D, fewer drugs are being approved, and patients are not receiving the new therapies they desperately need.

  • Why do current tools like animal testing and cells in dishes fail to predict drug efficacy and safety in humans?

    -Animal testing and cells in dishes fail because they do not replicate the complex and dynamic environment of the human body. Cells in dishes are not in their natural environment, and animal models often don't predict human responses accurately.

  • What is an organ-on-a-chip, and how does it address the limitations of traditional testing methods?

    -An organ-on-a-chip is a microengineered system that mimics the functions of human organs. It recreates the biochemistry, mechanical forces, and cell interactions of organs like the lung or gut, allowing for more accurate drug testing without relying on animals or flawed in vitro models.

  • How does the lung-on-a-chip work to mimic human lung conditions?

    -The lung-on-a-chip uses a flexible membrane with human lung cells and capillary cells. Mechanical forces are applied to stretch and contract the membrane, simulating the breathing process. Air and nutrient-rich liquid flow through the channels, allowing the cells to experience conditions similar to those in the human lung.

  • What significant biological response can be observed using the lung-on-a-chip?

    -The lung-on-a-chip allows for the observation of the immune response, such as white blood cells detecting bacterial infections and engulfing the bacteria. This can be visualized in real time within the chip.

  • What role do cilia play in lung function, and how can the lung-on-a-chip help study diseases related to cilia?

    -Cilia are hairlike structures in the lungs that help move mucus out of the airways, trapping particulates and pathogens. Damage to cilia, caused by factors like cigarette smoke, can lead to diseases such as bronchitis and cystic fibrosis. The lung-on-a-chip can help study these diseases by observing cilia function in a controlled environment.

  • What other organs, aside from the lung, are being developed on chips, and how are they used?

    -Other organs, such as the gut, are also being developed on chips. For example, the gut-on-a-chip mimics the motion of the human intestine, enabling the study of diseases like irritable bowel syndrome. These organ chips can model a variety of biological processes and diseases, providing valuable data for drug development.

  • How does linking multiple organ chips together create a 'virtual human on a chip'?

    -By linking multiple organ chips together, researchers can simulate the interactions between different organs in the human body. This 'virtual human on a chip' allows for the study of how drugs or diseases impact multiple organs simultaneously, improving the accuracy of predictions about their effects on humans.

  • What potential applications could organ-on-a-chip technology have outside of drug development?

    -Organ-on-a-chip technology could be used in a variety of industries, such as cosmetics, where it could test the safety of products without animal testing. It could also be used to study environmental toxins, bioterrorism, radiation exposure, and deadly diseases like Ebola and SARS.

  • How could organ-on-a-chip technology change the way clinical trials are conducted in the future?

    -Organ-on-a-chip technology could lead to more personalized clinical trials by creating chips that represent specific populations, including children or individuals with genetic differences. This could improve drug safety and efficacy testing, leading to more tailored treatments and better outcomes.

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Ähnliche Tags
Drug DevelopmentOrgan-on-a-ChipPersonalized MedicineClinical TrialsBiotechnologyHealth InnovationPharmaceutical IndustryHuman TestingMedical ResearchWyss Institute
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