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Cleveland Clinic is Treating Brain Tumors With New Medical Device

The Cleveland Clinic is using innovative brain catheters to treat tumors of the brain.
CLEVELAND CLINIC
The Cleveland Clinic is using innovative brain catheters to treat tumors of the brain.

Cleveland Clinic doctors are treating brain cancer patients with a new device.

Brain catheters developed by the hospital and Parker Hannifin Corp. are designed to bypass the blood brain barrier and allow drugs to be directly administered to the tumor.  

Cleveland Clinic neurosurgeon Dr. Michael Vogelbaum said the catheters are an innovation for treating glioblastoma.

“There are trials that were done a decade ago that were using just tubes off the shelf, and as it turns out, those tubes were later found to be completely ineffective for delivery," he said. "There were promising therapeutics that never really had a chance because they weren't effectively delivered. Now we’ve shown we can effectively deliver.”

Vogelbaum said the new catheters are undergoing trials to treat other brain conditions as well.

The Food and Drug Administration approved the device in 2017 after 12 successful trials with patients.

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Tyler Thompson was a reporter and on-air host for 89.7 NPR News. Thompson, originally from northeast Ohio, has spent the last three years working as a Morning Edition host and reporter at NPR member station KDLG Public Radio and reporter at the Bristol Bay Times Newspaper in Dillingham, Alaska.