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The potential utility of native tissue fluorescence spectroscopy
for in vivo cancer detection in humans was first discovered by Professor Robert R.
Alfano, Distinguished Professor of Physics and Engineering at the City College of
the City University of New York (CUNY).
Mediscience Technology, CUNY, and the Research Foundation of
CUNY established the Mediphotonics Laboratory (MPL) at CUNY to provide research and
development services in the area of tissue spectroscopy, cancer detection, and other
biological applications.
The staff of MPL, supervised by Dr. Alfano, developed our
current CD prototype devices. MPL was instrumental in developing our company's
latest technological breakthrough in medical imaging, the Stokes Shift Emission
Spectroscopy method. When comparing the effectiveness of the Stokes Shift Emission
Spectroscopy (SS) method with conventional fluorescence spectroscopy, it is
emphatically clear that the SS method is significantly more selective, providing
a more effective means of distinguishing cancerous from normal tissue.
MPL also piloted in vitro, pre-clinical testing of various
human tissue types such as breast, cervical, colon, and the upper aerodigestive
tract. The goal was to develop the preferred optical scanning and emission
wavelengths that yield the most definitive information about the native fluorescence
characteristics of specific scanned tissue.
The insight gained from this research has been the principal
source of knowledge for the company's subsequently issued and pending patents.
These patents are either owned outright or components of the company's worldwide
exclusive license, highly regarded as pioneering, blocking, and dominant in the
area of cancer diagnosis using fluorescence.
Moreover, numerous scientific papers published in peer-review
journals and scientific symposia presentations were derived from the research.
Finally, the MPL in vitro preclinical research and development
provided the foundation for Mediscience Technology's optical scanning parameters
for in vivo human clinical studies.
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