Podcast: AMR, UTI, Breathomics And 3D Printing Technology Innovators Profiled At BioWales 2024

Innovators, Entrepreneurs And Founders On The Next Stage To Commercialization

Breathomics, UTI diagnosis and advanced wound healing innovations were among the center stage technologies at BioWales in London 2024.

In Vivo Podcast
• Source: Shutterstock

John McKinley, serial entrepreneur and key player in early biotech company listings in the 1980s, was back at BioWales in London to profile the next developmental stages of Imspex Diagnostics, where he is CEO. The company’s vision is routine use of breath testing by health care professionals.

In the podcast below, recorded during a break in proceedings at the Kadans Science-hosted event in London’s Canary Wharf, McKinley...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on In Vivo for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Global Vision

More from Wound Management

News We’re Watching: Self-Powered Pacemakers, Artificial Hearts, And More

 
• By 

Medtech Insight's News We're Watching highlights medtech industry developments that you may have missed over the last few weeks. Chinese researchers are working on a self-powered pacemaker, Carmat updated its artificial heart progress, a trial validates Smith & Nephew's Regeneten implant in shoulder surgery, experts back intravascular IVUS in peripheral interventions, and Spectral AI launches a new trial of its AI for burn evaluation.

Integra Buys Acclarent From J&J To Expand ENT 'Footprint'

 
• By 

Integra will pay $275m in cash plus $5m more in potential milestone incentive payments to add Acclarent’s ear, nose, and throat surgery devices to its existing neurosurgery portfolio.

News We’re Watching: Biden Moves To Strengthen Supply Chain; More Medtech-Related Prosecutions; $5.5M Sepsis Grant For Siemens

 

This week, the Biden administration announced a new council on supply chain resilience that includes health care goals; an apparent enforcement surge against device fraud continued; Siemens won a $5.5m grant to develop a better sepsis test; and the FDA proposed new classifications for wound care products.