"CT Mucus Score" - A New Scoring System that Quantifies Airway Mucus Impaction Using CT Scans
- Technology Benefits
- Asthma and COPD are common lung diseases that cause a large public health burden. One important pathologic mechanism is the accumulation of thick mucus (mucus plugs) in the airways, which restrict airflow. Detecting airway mucus plugs is difficult because they are not visible on chest X-rays and are rarely associated with any symptoms of cough or sputum production. For asthma, using blood inflammatory proteins as biomarkers of lung disease has also had limited success. To date, there is no method that specifically identifies the subgroup of patients with airway mucus impaction, leading to difficulties in directing mucoactive treatments and designing clinical trials to test therapies in this patient subgroup. However, this presented technology has addressed the issues previously described with a solution. Advantages: The first scoring system that uses CT lung imaging to generate a quantitative score for airway mucus impactionIdentifies specific patient subgroup with lung mucus plugs to direct mucoactive treatmentsResults can be used to directly impact clinical care of patients with asthma or COPD
- Detailed Technology Description
- UCSF researchers have developed a new method to measure the burden of intraluminal mucus using Multi-detector Computed Tomography (MDCT) by quantifying the number of bronchopulmonary segments that are completely occluded with mucus. This technology has been validated in patients with asthma using CT scans with normal dose radiation protocols.
- Application No.
- WO2017197360
- Others
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Stage of Development
Reduced to Practice
Looking for Partners
To develop & commercialize the technology as a stand-alone diagnostic or companion diagnostic to identify asthma or COPD patients with airway mucus plugs, and would therefore benefit from specific treatments, such as mucolytics, anti-inflammatory drugs, or protein therapeutics.
Data Availability
Under CDA / NDA
Related Materials
Tech ID/UC Case
29369/2016-100-0
Related Cases
2016-100-0
- *Abstract
-
A novel method to measure airway mucus plugging using CT images from patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients.
- *IP Issue Date
- Nov 16, 2017
- *Principal Investigator
-
Name: David Gierada
Department:
Name: Scott Nagle
Department:
Name: John Newell
Department:
Name: Mark Schiebler
Department:
Name: Eleanor Dunican
Department:
Name: Brett Elicker
Department:
Name: John Fahy
Department:
- Country/Region
- USA