Conexiant
Login
  • The Analytical Scientist
  • The Cannabis Scientist
  • The Medicine Maker
  • The Ophthalmologist
  • The Pathologist
  • The Traditional Scientist
The Analytical Scientist
  • Explore

    Explore

    • Latest
    • News & Research
    • Trends & Challenges
    • Keynote Interviews
    • Opinion & Personal Narratives
    • Product Profiles
    • App Notes

    Featured Topics

    • Mass Spectrometry
    • Chromatography
    • Spectroscopy

    Issues

    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
  • Topics

    Techniques & Tools

    • Mass Spectrometry
    • Chromatography
    • Spectroscopy
    • Microscopy
    • Sensors
    • Data & AI

    • View All Topics

    Applications & Fields

    • Clinical
    • Environmental
    • Food, Beverage & Agriculture
    • Pharma & Biopharma
    • Omics
    • Forensics
  • People & Profiles

    People & Profiles

    • Power List
    • Voices in the Community
    • Sitting Down With
    • Authors & Contributors
  • Business & Education

    Business & Education

    • Innovation
    • Business & Entrepreneurship
    • Career Pathways
  • Events
    • Live Events
    • Webinars
  • Multimedia
    • Video
Subscribe
Subscribe

False

The Analytical Scientist / Issues / 2024 / Jul / Code Blue
Mass Spectrometry Clinical

Code Blue

“Calling MS into the surgery room, we have an emergency!”

By Markella Loi 07/25/2024 3 min read

Share

Intraoperative mass spec has been on the rise for some time  – from Zoltan Takats’ iKnife to Livia Eberlin’s MasSpec Pen. Yet technical issues as simple as power requirements are still limiting the full potential of mass spec in surgical rooms. 

In a May 2024 study, Michael Keating and the rest of Eberlin’s team – in collaboration with Orbitrap pioneer Alexander Makarov – have presented a solution to this challenge: running the MasSpec Pen with Orbitrap on just battery power. To assess feasibility, the scientists (literally) put wheels on their Orbitrap instruments (and yes, there is video proof in the paper) and rolled them through hospital corridors and moving elevators, while acquiring data. 

“‘But mass specs are not robust’.. ‘mass specs won't work in the OR’.. ‘they are too finicky’.. ‘I worked with MS in undergrad and it is too complex’.. statements I heard over years about MS are partially true BUT we are showing that MS can & will be adapted to work in hospitals!” tweeted Eberlin.

And there are more updates on the MasSpec Pen; it is now being adapted for identification of microbial cultures, minimal invasion screening of mouth cancer, ovarian carcinomas, and subtyping of non-small cell lung cancer – as presented at ASMS 2024 in Anaheim.

But has the MasSpec Pen been used in brain cancer? Not  according to a paper from Purdue University, Mayo Clinic, Tsinghua University, and Huashan Hospital. To that end, Mahdiyeh Shahi, Graham Cooks, and their colleagues introduce DESI-MS for the rapid detection of mutations in gliomas – in just a few minutes!

“Our measurements and prediction can be done in less than two minutes, which makes it ideal for an intraoperative diagnostic tool to be used during the surgery which could give more information to the surgeon about clear margins, so they can make better decisions on removing tumor tissue and when to stop removing it,” explained Shahi in a press release. 

In a 2023 interview, Cooks – who has been working on brain diagnostics using DESI-MS for the past 10 years – revealed that he’s surprised at how slowly this technology is being translated to point-of-care medicine. The reason? Both the cautious nature of the medical field when it comes to adopting new techniques and the dominance of -omics.

Nonetheless, Cooks argues that even though omics analysis data are valuable, they do not hold an operational value, as they’re only available after the surgery is complete. Both DESI-MS and the MasSpec Pen deliver real-time information to assist the clinicians with a diagnosis. 

From a technical perspective the tools are very promising, but perhaps these technologies are still too experimental in medical professionals’ eyes to use in practice. So, what will it take to overcome this hesitation? Most likely, collaboration. “Although the relationship between the mass spectrometry and medical communities is really close, one would hope to see many more joint publications between surgeons, pathologists, and experts in MS that address actual medical conditions and patient data,” says Cooks.

For more mass spec news, research, and insight, why not join me over on our newsletter – Mass Spec from The Analytical Scientist – sign up here!

Newsletters

Receive the latest analytical science news, personalities, education, and career development – weekly to your inbox.

Newsletter Signup Image

About the Author(s)

Markella Loi

Associate Editor, The Analytical Scientist

More Articles by Markella Loi

False

Advertisement

Recommended

False

False

The Analytical Scientist
Subscribe

About

  • About Us
  • Work at Conexiant Europe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 Texere Publishing Limited (trading as Conexiant), with registered number 08113419 whose registered office is at Booths No. 1, Booths Park, Chelford Road, Knutsford, England, WA16 8GS.