How Beacon Biosignals Brings Precision Medicine in Neurology to the Brain

0 Views· 06/06/23
The Harry Glorikian Show
0
In Drama

Unlike cancer, brain diseases like epilepsy, Alzheimer’s disease, or depression don't tend to have  easily measured biomarkers that could help doctors tailor treatments, or that could help researchers develop more effective drugs. So in neurology and psychiatry, the precision medicine revolution hasn't really arrived yet. But Beacon Biosignals, where Harry's guest  Jacob Donoghue is the co-founder and CEO, is trying to change all that. Beacon is focused on making electroencephalography into a more reliable and useful data source for diagnosing and treating neurological disease. EEG is a non-invasive way to measure electrical activity in the brain, and it’s been a common medical tool for almost 100 years. But takes a lot of training for a human doctor to interpret an EEG correctly. It’s slow, it’s expensive, and it’s a bit of a dark art—all of which makes it the perfect candidate for machine learning analysis. Donoghue says the goal at Beacon Biosignals is to use computation to get more value out of existing EEG data. By peering deeper into the data, he thinks it should be possible to identify subtypes of problems like epilepsy or Alzheimer’s, and help neurologists understand which patients will respond best to which therapies. On top of that, better EEG measurements could also give drug developers and regulators more clinical endpoints to measure when they’re trying to evaluate the safety and efficacy of new drugs for CNS diseases. If Beacon’s vision comes true, the precision medicine revolution might finally start to reach the brain.For a full transcript of this episode, please visit our episode page at http://www.glorikian.com/podcast Please rate and review The Harry Glorikian Show on Apple Podcasts! Here's how to do that from an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch:1. Open the Podcasts app on your iPhone, iPad, or Mac. 2. Navigate to The Harry Glorikian Show podcast. You can find it by searching for it or selecting it from your library. Just note that you'll have to go to the series page which shows all the episodes, not just the page for a single episode.3. Scroll down to find the subhead titled "Ratings & Reviews."4. Under one of the highlighted reviews, select "Write a Review."5. Next, select a star rating at the top — you have the option of choosing between one and five stars. 6. Using the text box at the top, write a title for your review. Then, in the lower text box, write your review. Your review can be up to 300 words long.7. Once you've finished, select "Send" or "Save" in the top-right corner. 8. If you've never left a podcast review before, enter a nickname. Your nickname will be displayed next to any reviews you leave from here on out. 9. After selecting a nickname, tap OK. Your review may not be immediately visible.That's it! Thanks so much.

Show more

 0 Comments sort   Sort By


Up next