New Treatment for Breathing Disorders - Isis Project No 7259
Deep Brain Stimulation technology for treatment of respiratory disease.
Improved lung function
Oxford Researchers have developed a new way of treating the most severe cases of respiratory diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), for cases when treatment with conventional therapies is insufficient. The team have discovered that electrical stimulation of specific brain regions leads to significant improvements in lung function.
Work to date has shown that a technique known as Deep Brain Stimulation can be used to electrically stimulate specific brain areas to generate a significant boost to lung function. Current work is focused on demonstrating that this new approach can correct drug-induced broncho-constriction in non-asthmatic patients.
Unmet clinical need
Respiratory disease represents a huge burden to society. There is a stage in advanced COPD when breathlessness is intractable, leading to repeated hospital admission. Admissions of broadly this type are the second commonest cause of hospital admission in the UK and the USA. In addition, asthma affects 300 million people worldwide and around 5% of these cannot be treated effectively using current medications.
There is therefore an urgent need to improve
treatment options for patients with severe
respiratory disease. For many patients, where
other therapies have proven ineffective, Deep
Brain Stimulation could offer a ‘last resort’
for what is a potentially fatal condition. Many
deaths from respiratory disease are sudden
and result from an under self-administration of
bronchodilator therapies. The new Deep Brain
Stimulation technique would be constantly
active and therefore under-administration of
bronchodilator therapy would no longer be a
concern.
Established surgical techniques
Deep Brain Stimulation is already an established technique for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. The technique involves inserting a small electrode into a specific region of the brain and stimulating that region with an electric current. The operative procedure is minimally-invasive and patients are normally home within two days following surgery.
Patent Status
The technology is the subject of a UK priority patent application. Isis would like to speak with parties interested in commercialising this technology. Please contact the Project Manager by using the link below.
Request Further Information: Project Number 7259 - New Treatment for Breathing Disorders

