Feature Article

Designing Engineering Applications 
For Medicine In the Next Century

By Frank B. Cerra, M.D.

It was with great pleasure that I accepted the honor of sharing with you some thoughts about designing engineering applications for medicine in the next century. Founded in 1884, the IEEE has led the world in development and implementation of electrical and electronic engineering, and computer engineering and computer science. Indeed, the accomplishments in this area dominated the 20th century in virtually all areas of our life experience: business, banking, transportation, science, health, devices, information and communications, and so much more.

Here are four examples illustrating how the technology has changed my life:

  • I was recently traveling in the Middle East. While in a fairly remote place, I needed money. I was able to put my bank card from Minneapolis into an ATM and out came cash in the local currency.

  • I am able to conduct dialogue, conferences, and planning sessions with my colleagues in professional health education while they are in Germany, Japan, and Australia.

  • I don't have to go to the shopping mall anymore. I can be at home or at work and order just about anything I need, online, with at least the same -- probably greater -- security than using my credit card with a real sales person.

  • I recently had a patient with a suspected brain tumor. The biopsy was performed with an automated, MRI-guided biopsy system. He went home the same day. No operating room or long hospital stay, and with a much smaller hospital bill!

The streams of innovation in engineering and biology in the twentieth century have set the stage for a very exciting twenty-first, the products of which will revolutionize the prevention and treatment of disease as well as the promotion of health. Right now, this all resides in our visions and desires to make the potential real. Making the reality will emanate from intellectual creativity and innovation using the acquired knowledge in genomics, molecular and cellular biology, and the various disciplines of engineering. There will be a marriage of the disciplines of design, information sciences, engineering and biology that will require interdisciplinary efforts, the creation of new disciplinary areas, new resources, and change. Discussing this topic tonight tells us that we have already begun the process.

Two of the areas of innovation in engineering that have profoundly affected medicine are computational technology and the ability to "make machines small." The following four examples illustrate this point:

  • The digital data from whole body CT scans or MRIs, can now be integrated into three-dimensional images that can be viewed in 360 degrees. This capacity has enabled facial reconstruction in children with inborn errors in development, positioning of instruments in organs in order to sample tissue or deliver therapy, enhanced diagnostic accuracy and planning of surgical interventions, and has provided an effective supplement to the teaching and understanding of anatomy for medical students and practitioners.

  • The assessment of gas tensions, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, in the blood of intensive care unit patients, is a critical measurement. The measurement used to be very complex and take a lot of time (the van Slyck method). Now, we use in-line sensors with continuous measurement in patients. Countless lives have been saved with this capability.

  • When I treated my first patient with kidney failure with the artificial kidney (a procedure called hemodialysis), the device was as large as a desktop and took several hours to prepare. Now, with the development of capillary technology, the device is small and the process quick and efficient.

  • When I first started working with amino acid analysis using mass spectroscopy, the machine filled up the better part of a mid-sized room. That same mass spectroscope can now be made wafer thin and about twice the size of a silver dollar.

Biologists have known about chromosomes for a long time, and interest in genetics has been around since the time of Mendel. In the twentieth century, Watson and Crick began a movement that would change biology forever: the description of deoxyribonucleic acid -- DNA. This is the "stuff of life." The characterization of the human genome will be completed in a few short years.

The major advances that have facilitated the rapid progress of the past 15-20 years have stemmed from developments in the technology of molecular biology and the science of molecular and cellular biology and genetics. These areas have come to understand how cells talk internally and externally, how the protein factories in the cell are regulated, and how the genetic material itself is organized and works. These disciplines cut across the classic fields of biochemistry, microbiology, anatomy, physiology, and pharmacology. These new fields have reorganized the way biology is practiced and have promoted both interdisciplinary and interscholastic research.

New fields have emerged, such as genomics and proteinomics. New support systems that will become new disciplines, such as computational biology, biomathematics and bioinformatics, and bioengineering have already developed or are developing now. These latter areas house the structural and compositional data of genes and proteins. The end result of all this is primarily descriptive. As stimulating as that is, for medicine, the key question is "so what?" What good is the knowledge? What can it be used for? Will it prevent, treat, or cure a disease? All frequently asked questions. And the resounding answer to these questions is Yes! Yes! Yes! This is what the twenty-first century will be about.

The following four examples illustrate some of the bridging and co-mingling of biology and engineering that we have begun to see over the past ten years:

  • The insertion of a new gene into a cell remains one of the problems hindering progress with gene therapies for genetic diseases. A favorite way to accomplish this is with viral vectors. This approach is difficult, somewhat complicated, and modestly successful. A novel technology was recently developed: a gun that shoots the new gene into the target cell on a particle of gold.

  • Cell culture systems have developed to the extent that embryonic stem cells can be cultured. These cells have the capacity to differentiate into almost any kind of cell, depending on the biologic factors or messengers that they come into contact with. Achieving this milestone has made the vision of growing new organs in culture a reality.

  • New skin is now used to cover burned skin. Epithelial cells are cultured and the sheets of cells fixed to an artificially made matrix. The combination constitutes skin that is then placed on the burn area. The artificial matrix is then naturally replaced with endogenous matrix and new skin appears.

  • Liver cells are now placed into collagen matrix and placed inside the lumens of capillary tubes. This is the same capillary technology that is used for hemodialysis. These cells function and can be modulated with other biologic agents to focus the desired biologic functions. This describes the bioartificial liver, an extra corporeal device that is currently in clinical testing as a treatment for liver failure.

What remains is the process of envisioning possible scenarios and then working together to find real solutions. For the health of the public, this is the promise and the potential that will take place in the next millennium. Following are five hypothetical situations that I discussed with my engineer colleagues and their possible solutions:

  • My friend, John, develops acute fulminant hepatitis. Even with support from the bioartificial liver, he progresses into coma from liver failure. A call is placed to the in situ liver service and a few of John's normal liver cells are taken to the lab. Over the period of a several days, John's liver cells are grown on an artificial matrix with hepatic architecture. When the size of the left lateral liver segment is reached, John's diseased liver is removed and the liver segment placed in situ. Within a few weeks, the natural processes have grown a new liver and John will lead a normal life.
  • My engineer colleague's friend has a heart attack, from which his heart will not recover. A call goes out to the Neo-organogenesis Unit that a new heart is needed. They ask for his demographic profile, and come to the bedside and run a genomic profile on the cells in his blood. Upon their return to the Unit, they then select a heart of normal tissue and function, grown in vitro, and genetically engineered not to reject, and replace his failing heart. He walks home from the hospital.
  • Joan is working on the farm and severs her left arm at the shoulder on a farm instrument. She is treated at her local hospital and recovers with a mid-arm stump on the left, and is referred to the Regenerative Limb Center. As an outpatient, she receives an implant device that is loaded with the necessary regulatory and growth factors that can be released in the right place at the right time. Over the next three months, Joan grows a new arm, forearm, and hand, and returns to normal life.
  • Bill is injured in a car accident, cannot move both legs, and has no feeling below his navel. He is taken to the Regional Research Trauma Center. Their new three-dimensional NMR with 360-degree viewing localizes the spinal cord lesion at the level of T8. A specially designed delivery device is placed in the blood supply to the same area and sequentially releases the regulatory and growth agents that will control the injury and regenerate the spinal cord. Bill leaves the hospital two weeks later walking and with normal sensation.
  • Scientists at the Translational Biology Institute of the University of Minnesota are working with a group of clinicians to develop an agent that can modify a receptor protein for a patient with diabetes. The lights go down and an image of the receptor site, and then of the receptor protein in question, appears in the room. The active site on the protein is identified and the structure of the activating agent designed. Once completed, a simulation of function is run, and design refinement undertaken. The completed design is then sent to the production unit and administered to the patient. The blood sugar becomes normal.

These are a few of the numerous possibilities that build upon the streams of discovery and innovation in engineering and biology -- visions that will become real in the twenty-first century. The potential to make these and others real exists within us. We, the academic and corporate worlds, both public and private, must work together to make them happen. These developments will undoubtedly create new ethical, legal, and policy issues that will need to be resolved. That will also be our obligation. Let us accept the opportunities, along with the accountabilities, and move ahead.

The preceding is the text of an address by Frank B. Cerra, M.D. to the Sections Congress '99 of the IEEE on 8 October 1999. The theme of the Congress was Design of the Century. Please see George F. McClure's related editorial which appears in the May 2000 IEEE-USA Perspectives entitled "Biomedical Engineering -- the New Frontier?"

[ IEEE-USA ]

Last Updated:  May 3, 2000