Edmonton Journal – New lab brings fledgling health tech companies together in shared space
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:16:16+00:00A local startup with plans to market a more accurate prostate cancer screening test is one of the first businesses to set up shop in a new downtown shared lab space for health tech companies.
A Less Invasive Route to Test For Prostate Cancer
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:18:04+00:00Alberta scientists, at Nanostics, have created a blood test that could make a significant impact in the way patients are tested and treated for prostate cancer.
Funding to develop technology that will detect prostate cancer earlier
Forward Momentum2022-02-05T03:17:45+00:00EDMONTON — Alberta Innovates, the Alberta Cancer Foundation and DynaLIFE have joined together to help commercialize Alberta-owned innovations that will detect cancer earlier and improve treatment for Albertans.
NVIDIA – How GPU-Powered Cellular Analysis Could Help Avoid Unnecessary Prostate Cancer Biopsies
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:23:19+00:001.3M North American men get biopsies each year checking for prostate cancer, many of them unnecessary. UofA researchers want to change that with a new test that relies on GPU computing.
Startup Nanostics preparing launch of blood-based biomarker test for prostate cancer
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:25:26+00:00A new diagnostic will allow men to bypass painful biopsies to test for aggressive prostate cancer.
New blood test uses nanotechnology to predict prostate cancer
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:26:18+00:00A new diagnostic will allow men to bypass painful biopsies to test for aggressive prostate cancer.
U of A uses nanotechnology to develop new test for aggressive prostate cancer
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:26:51+00:00Alberta men diagnosed with prostate cancer could soon have a better blood test to help determine if they can bypass a painful and invasive biopsy.
Could there soon be a better way to protect against prostate cancer?
Forward Momentum2022-01-04T19:27:25+00:00The PSA test for prostate cancer has been linked to unnecessary treatments and biopsies. That’s prompted researchers to start developing a more accurate prostate cancer detection tool.