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[Video] Interview with Kathryn Tunstall, Chairman of NeoMatrix

Irvine, California-based NeoMatrix offers the HALO Breast Pap Test, a fully automated, noninvasive breast disease screening device designed for use in a primary care setting. HALO is FDA approved for the collection of nipple aspirate fluid for cytological evaluation. The collected fluid is used to determine and/or differentiate normal, pre-malignant and malignant cells.

If made a part of routine check-ups, NeoMatrix believes HALO would enable physicians and patients to monitor cellular changes within breast ducts earlier, before they develop into larger, potentially cancerous lesions discovered by via conventional breast cancer screening modalities like mammography or manual breast examination.

Over 40,000 women will die from breast cancer this year; it is the second leading cause of cancer death for US women. On average, breast cancer will have been growing eight years before it’s detectable on a mammogram and ten years before its palpable. $3 billion is spent annually on breast cancer screening, yet women still find 75% of lumps themselves.

Kathryn Tunstall, Chairman of NeoMatrix, is a breast cancer survivor. She served as President and CEO of Conceptus, from 1993 to 2000, leading the company through several rounds of private financing and an initial public offering in 1996. She has served as Chairman of the NeoMatrix Board of Directors since August 2006.

5 December 2007 | Blog, news1, Video | Douglas Cress | Comments

2 Responses to “[Video] Interview with Kathryn Tunstall, Chairman of NeoMatrix”

  1. 1 OneMedPlace » Blog Archive » Breast Cancer Screening Co-Pay Could Hurt Insurers’ Bottom Line 25 January 2008 @ 7:02 am

    […] other technologies on the horizon, including the HALO Breast Pap Test, cancer detection may occur in its earliest stages. Insurers may begin to selectively target […]

  2. 2 Breast Cancer Screening Co-Pay Could Hurt Insurers’ Bottom Line | Biotech Stocks Blog 28 January 2008 @ 10:05 pm

    […] technologies on the horizon that could detect cancer in its earliest stages, insurers may begin to selectively target treatments that are best for the patient, and best for […]

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