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Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions
Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions

The Age

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions

Optiscan Imaging has fired a major shot in a bid to expand into the lucrative United States medical imaging market by inking a blockbuster five-year deal with American pharmaceutical outfit Long Grove Pharmaceuticals. The exclusive collaborative agreement will see Long Grove's fluorescein sodium contrast dye, AK-FLUOR, supplied for use in Optiscan's InVue imaging system in clinical studies, starting with breast surgery. Long Grove was founded by US healthcare investor Water Street and is known for its high-quality, cost-effective drug formulations. The company is the legal manufacturer of AK-FLUOR dye. The contrast dye is used to highlight cellular structures for medical imaging during surgery. Optiscan already uses the dye with its InVue fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging technology. 'AK-FLUOR will be used in combination with our fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging devices to undertake studies and clinical trials.' Optiscan chief executive officer and managing director Dr Camile Farah The two companies have teamed up to explore and support new clinical uses for the injectable dye and will initially focus on breast surgery. The deal is expected to expand into gastrointestinal endoscopy, robotic-assisted surgery and laparoscopic procedures. The data generated from the trials will be used to fast-track United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals for both the device and the drug, potentially unlocking broader commercial use and a quicker route into the US market. As part of the deal, Optiscan will get valuable information about how AK-FLUOR works in the body and how it's manufactured. In return, Long Grove will receive support for new FDA applications if new therapeutic uses of its drug in microscopic imaging come to light from the trials. Optiscan chief executive officer and managing director Dr Camile Farah said: 'For Optiscan, the agreement gives us a supply of Long Grove's AK-FLUOR, which will be used in combination with our fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging devices to undertake studies and clinical trials. The data flowing from these studies will be an invaluable resource for our regulatory submissions. For Long Grove, the collaboration should hopefully identify new uses for its drug.'

Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions
Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions

Sydney Morning Herald

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Optiscan teams up with US drugmaker to support FDA submissions

Optiscan Imaging has fired a major shot in a bid to expand into the lucrative United States medical imaging market by inking a blockbuster five-year deal with American pharmaceutical outfit Long Grove Pharmaceuticals. The exclusive collaborative agreement will see Long Grove's fluorescein sodium contrast dye, AK-FLUOR, supplied for use in Optiscan's InVue imaging system in clinical studies, starting with breast surgery. Long Grove was founded by US healthcare investor Water Street and is known for its high-quality, cost-effective drug formulations. The company is the legal manufacturer of AK-FLUOR dye. The contrast dye is used to highlight cellular structures for medical imaging during surgery. Optiscan already uses the dye with its InVue fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging technology. 'AK-FLUOR will be used in combination with our fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging devices to undertake studies and clinical trials.' Optiscan chief executive officer and managing director Dr Camile Farah The two companies have teamed up to explore and support new clinical uses for the injectable dye and will initially focus on breast surgery. The deal is expected to expand into gastrointestinal endoscopy, robotic-assisted surgery and laparoscopic procedures. The data generated from the trials will be used to fast-track United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals for both the device and the drug, potentially unlocking broader commercial use and a quicker route into the US market. As part of the deal, Optiscan will get valuable information about how AK-FLUOR works in the body and how it's manufactured. In return, Long Grove will receive support for new FDA applications if new therapeutic uses of its drug in microscopic imaging come to light from the trials. Optiscan chief executive officer and managing director Dr Camile Farah said: 'For Optiscan, the agreement gives us a supply of Long Grove's AK-FLUOR, which will be used in combination with our fluorescence-based endomicroscopic imaging devices to undertake studies and clinical trials. The data flowing from these studies will be an invaluable resource for our regulatory submissions. For Long Grove, the collaboration should hopefully identify new uses for its drug.'

Long Grove, Illinois farm Institute of Soil & Soul applies Jewish principles to farming practices
Long Grove, Illinois farm Institute of Soil & Soul applies Jewish principles to farming practices

CBS News

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

Long Grove, Illinois farm Institute of Soil & Soul applies Jewish principles to farming practices

The Institute of Soil & Soul in Long Grove, Illinois, is like many others; workers grow fruits and vegetables and raise chickens. But it is also very different. "The institute is a Jewish regenerative farm," said Gabriel Gould, founder. That means combining Jewish principles with farming practices that restore depleted soil. "We're talking about adding organic material back to the soil and increasing fertility," Gould said. The orchard is a good example. It contains seven different varieties of fruits, including apples and pears. And there's also a bush that sends nutrients into the soil. "It sounds alternative, but it's not. It has ancient roots," Gould said. Those ancient roots include principles and knowledge from the Torah, the Jewish holy text also called the Five Books of Moses. "So much of the Torah was written for people not just living on, but living with the land," said Gould. He wants to reconnect Jews to their agricultural roots. "We've been so disconnected," he said. "We've forgotten that we're as much the people of the land as the people of the book." Gould started his business as a for-profit farm about five years ago, but after the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. He wanted to give back and converted it into a nonprofit institute. The Institute of Soil and Soul offers education programs and information on regenerative farming. "Our sages say we don't go where we want to go, we go where we're needed," he said. "And I think that purpose is revealing."

Long Grove, Illinois covered bridge hit by a truck yet again
Long Grove, Illinois covered bridge hit by a truck yet again

CBS News

time20-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • CBS News

Long Grove, Illinois covered bridge hit by a truck yet again

It happened yet again — another truck hit the historic covered bridge in Long Grove, Illinois, north of Chicago. This time, it was not the bridge, but the truck that sustained the most damage. The historic bridge is a main attraction. But business owners say just about every week, a truck gets stuck trying to go through the bridge. "It keeps the town busy. It definitely makes a big scene when it happens," said Rachael Swift, owner of Rachael's Whimsical Boutique in Long Grove. "That becomes a two-, three-hour escapade of trying to get them out from under the bridge." Swift said she saw a truck slam into the bridge as it sped by on Monday. "He didn't look like he was going to slow down, so I ran around and ran outside, and I grabbed my phone and started taking pictures — and you can kind of hear this crunching of him trying to squeeze under the bridge," she said. "Once he got stuck under the bridge yesterday, he tried backing out, and it just sounds like metal crunching up on itself." CBS News Chicago has reported on mishaps involving the covered bridge numerous times. In September 2022, a truck got stuck. The very next week, the same happened to a U-Haul. In March 2023, an Amazon truck couldn't get through. At that time, the Lake County Sheriff's office said it was the 45th time the bridge has been struck since reopening in 2020. The village's visiting center says the iconic Robert Parker Coffin Bridge dates back to the 1840s. The first bridge, according to the Long Grove History website, was a "simple wooden affair" that provided a less messy alternative for those who otherwise would have ridden their horses through Buffalo Creek. The wooden bridge was replaced with a modern truss structure in 1906. The covering, while it may seem like a quaint piece of turn-of-the-last-century Americana too, did not come around until 1972. The bridge was reinforced with a steel structure in 2020 to avoid expensive repairs. That came after it was closed for two years when it was severely damaged by a truck crash in 2018. The Facebook page for the Long Grove covered bridge accident tracker said this was the 66th time the bridge has been hit since 2020. "We'll have some times where it'll get hit once a week, or it'll be a couple of weeks or a month — and then all of a sudden, one will hit it," said Swift. Despite signs stating trucks aren't allowed to go through, Swift believes it will happen again. "It's going to happen. I hate to have to say that, but there's only so much the village and just as business owners we can do," she said. "It really is on the person who's driving the truck and just building that awareness." CBS News Chicago reached out to Long Grove Village President Bill Jacob to see whether the village will be making any changes to prevent this, but we have not heard back.

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