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Nola Reporter

Monday, December 23, 2024

Team Fleur FemTech wins annual Novel Tech Challenge

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When Shelby White, Arya Monticino, Alexis LaRosa, and Jasmine Kiley,  all students in the Tulane University School of Science and Engineering,  joined forces to enter the Eighth Annual Novel Tech Challenge, they  knew they wanted to design something for women with limited access to  health care.

In their preliminary research, they discovered that approximately 10  percent of American women of childbearing age suffer from endometriosis,  a gynecological condition that causes severe pelvic pain and sometimes  infertility. Endometriosis can take an average of 10 years to diagnose,  and they wanted to find a way to shorten that timeline.

They decided to design a home-use test to detect the disease. Their  team, named Fleur FemTech, developed a tool that utilizes lateral flow  technology and antibody detection techniques to determine if a person  has elevated levels of antibodies associated with endometriosis.

"We  are grateful to the Novel Tech Challenge and appreciate the opportunity  to immerse ourselves in aspects of science that we have not previously  had the chance to explore."

Tulane PhD candidate Shelby White

“Our motivation came from our own experiences living in a city where  many women do not have healthcare access, or whose symptoms are  dismissed by physicians,” said White, a PhD candidate in Tulane’s  Biomechanics of Growth and Remodeling Lab within the Department of  Biomedical Engineering.

White’s teammates include Monticino, a recent graduate of the  master’s program for material science; LaRosa, a junior Stamps Scholar  studying cell and molecular biology and history; and Kiley, a sophomore  Goldwater and Stamps Scholar studying biochemistry and public health.

Judges, all alumni of the Tulane School of Science and Engineering,  named Fleur FemTech the grand prize winner. Placing second and third  respectively were CleanSheath, a patent-pending urinary catheter that  reduces the risk of urinary tract infections, and Gecko Tech  Enterprises, which is pursuing novel and practical applications for  proprietary residue-free adhesive designs.

Teams in the Novel Tech Challenge receive mentoring from Tulane  alumni and faculty members and are judged based on innovative,  interdisciplinary, and technology-based content as well as scientific  merit, feasibility, and comprehensiveness of planning and development.

“The Novel Tech Challenge provides students the opportunity to pursue  topics of personal interest and work in teams to address the challenges  they see in the world today,” said John Christie, director of the  Tulane Office of Technology Transfer and Intellectual Property, which  conducts the competition. “And it is amazing every year to watch these  students work together and make so much progress in the space of a  school year on such remarkable projects.”

The team won $10,000, which will go toward further development of the  test kit. This includes optimizing current antibody levels and  including additional biomarkers that are associated with endometriosis,  White said.

They also plan to enter more competitions, both in New Orleans and  Houston, where Monticino has been hired as product development engineer.

“We are moving full steam ahead to further develop our home use test and gain insight on our market value,” White said.

“Overall, we are grateful to the Novel Tech Challenge and appreciate  the opportunity to immerse ourselves in aspects of science that we have  not previously had the chance to explore. It helped translate the  critical skills that we learn in the classroom into developing a product  with clinical and market potential.”

The Novel Technology Challenge was sponsored by the Burton D. Morgan  Foundation, the Wall Family Innovation Prize, the School of Science and  Engineering, the Office of Technology Transfer & Intellectual  Property Development, the Scot Ackerman MakerSpace, the law firm of Pugh  Accardo, and F Branding + Print.

Original source can be found here.

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