THE NEED

Patients can get the appropriate care they need
when urologists can better diagnose them.

THE NEED

Better diagnoses for OAB (Overactive Bladder)

Urinary urgency, sometimes associated with frequency with or without associated accidental loss of urine in the absence of urinary tract infection or pathology, occurs in 54 million individuals in the US.

It affects 36 percent of women (ages 18-70) and 16 percent of men, a $25-billion economic burden every year.

Read more about OAB

THE NEED

Better diagnoses for BPH (Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy)

An estimated 38 million men in the US are affected by obstructive voiding systems. In fact, one in four US urologist office visits concern BPH-induced symptoms.

With 12 million new BPH patients annually, the US spends $4 billion managing the disease each year. Almost all men get it (50 percent by age 50; 90 percent by age 80).

55 percent are prescribed drugs. 10 percent have surgery. Using today’s outdated protocols, we hope these are the optimal interventions.

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THE NEED

Better tools for CRO (Clinical Research Organizations)

No clinical treatment for BPH or OAB can gain FDA approval without supportive clinical outcomes data from clinical trials. Urology has the added burden of clinically tracking outcomes with comprehensive and complete 3-7 day voiding diaries for every clinical participant with a 100 percent completion rate!

That explains why so many studies fail to achieve the standard: Non-compliance when utilizing paper and e-diary methods costs industry millions, not to mention the delay for innovations we so desperately need.

Read more about CROs

Video Transcript

Dr. Laing: This is the new CarePath System. It is a system designed to allow us – in real time, in a remote setting, such as the patient’s home or in a clinic, or even in a hospital setting – to monitor urine output with great accuracy.

Joe Hage: I think you’ve vastly undersold what you’re holding in your hand.

Dr. Laing: You think?

Joe Hage: You are holding the first and only remote patient monitoring system for urology.

Dr. Laing: That is correct.

[Click to expand for the rest of the transcript.]