Google Is Building Smart Contact Lenses

A few days ago, Google X unveiled its latest – a contact lens with a built-in glucose sensor. The lens is being developed specifically to help track blood glucose levels for diabetics. Google is hoping that the lenses will present a less painful and invasive alternative to the typical method of pricking a finger and testing blood droplets multiple times a day.

The prototype contacts are outfitted with tiny wireless chips and glucose sensors sandwiched between two lenses. They are able to measure blood sugar levels once per second, and Google is working on putting LED lights inside the lenses that would flash when the levels are too low or high.

See Google’s blog post for more information.

MSKCC in the News: December 1 – December 18

  • MSKCC’s Dr. Leonard Saltz was featured in a Minnesota Public Radio News broadcast about the decision by MSKCC to not stock the colon cancer drug – Zaltrap.
  • MSKCC, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and the Seattle Children’s Research Institute have teamed up to launch Juno Therapeutics, a new cancer immunotherapy-focused biotech company.
  • Crain’s New York Business reported that MSKCC and Hunter College will move forward with their planned 1.15 million-square-foot medical complex along the FDR Drive between East 73rd and East 74th streets.

MSKCC in the News: November 1 – November 15

  • Dr. David Gultekin, a research physicist at MSKCC, is quoted in a Public News Service article about research that indicates that wearable smartphones could present health risks – especially from cell-phone radiation.
  • MSKCC aims for 90% staff vaccination for flu by December 1.
  • MSKCC’s Dr. Michael Mauro commented in a New York Times article about the recent announcement by the Food and Drug Administration to suspend sales of a leukemia drug, Iclusig.