Funding For Clinical Trials For New Probe To Detect Skin Cancer

Assistant Professor James Tunnell has been awarded a Phase II Early Career Award from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation to continue the development and testing of a device that uses light to detect skin cancer without the need for an invasive biopsy procedure. The $260,000 grant will support Tunnell’s work for the next two years to refine the device called a “clinical spectrometer” and to conduct additional clinical trials.

Original post by Dermatology News From Medical News Today

19 August 2008 | Dermatology | Comments

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