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Forbes - Healthcare

How to Prevent Domestic Violence Deaths UK Smoking Ban Highlights Debate Over The Proper Function Of Government What To Do When Someone You Love Has Cancer Psychedelic Medicine Goes Mainstream: Breakthrough or Bubble? Humana Profits Eclipse $1 Billion As Medicare Costs Ease Slightly What Are Peptides And Why Is Everyone Talking About Them? Tonsillectomy Doesn’t Lead To Illness, But Tonsillitis Just Might Does Retail Pharmacy Have A Tower Records Problem? Precision Radiation Therapy Could Offer New Hope For Hard-To-Treat Cancers Centene’s Obamacare Enrollment Drops By 2 Million After Congress Strips Subsidies RFK Jr.’s Messaging Could Be Impacting Food And Pharmaceutical Choices Over A Million Road Crash Deaths Annually Prompt $350 Million Investment Breast Cancer Screening Tool Avoids Radiation, Compression, Contrast Large Study Finds Benefits Of Doula Care On Postpartum Outcomes TrumpRx Has Signed Deals With Nearly Every Major Drugmaker. Are Prices Actually Falling? America Can’t Lower Healthcare Costs Without A Moonshot Trump’s Orders Elevate The Medical Status Of Psychedelics And Cannabis Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs, Humana Partner To Take On Employer Drug Costs Cell, Gene And Specialty Drug Costs Intensify For Health Plans U.S. Tennis Participation Continues Growth. Up 54 Percent Since 2019 New AMA Study Finds Burnout Is Decreasing Among Medical Residents And Fellows Daytime Naps May Be A Sign Of Serious Health Problems, Study Reveals New Antibody Drugs Target Disease From Within Concierge Medicine Was Built For The Few. Here’s How To Open It To The Many Burnout in Medicine Is Still Prevalent, With Emergency Medicine Leading Who Is Actually Qualified To Give Advice On Peptides And Who Isn’t What the 49ers Can Teach Leaders About Handling False And Misleading Narratives Do Older Adults Need Routine Colonoscopies Or Low Thyroid Drugs? Your Period, Your Proteins, Your Health Doctors Say Hegseth’s Flu Vaccine Decision Will Weaken Military Readiness Where Bullets Fly, Malaria Kills Using AI To Personalize Healthcare–Without Losing Patient Trust Progress For Preeclampsia Allowing Our Military To Refuse Flu Vaccination Is A Bad Idea. Here’s Why Can Vaccine Development Weather Political Storms? A Virus From Farmed Seafood Is Causing A New Eye Disease In People Elevance Health Profits Eclipse $1.7 Billion Despite Elevated Costs The UK Passes A Lifetime Smoking Ban. Could America Be Next? There's No Such Thing As Brain Honey UnitedHealth Group Profits Eclipse $6 Billion As Medical Costs Ease AI Is Already Here. The Real Risk In Public Health Is Sitting It Out UnitedHealthcare Reduces Need For Prior Approvals For Patients In Rural America Why No Child Should Have To Sacrifice School To Care For Their Family Oscar Health Launches Consumer Marketplace For Insurance Beyond Its Own Calling The Iconic 867-5309 Now Goes To A Cancer Helpline FDA Lists Xanax Recall. Here’s What You Need To Know What Trump’s Ibogaine Executive Order Means For Veterans With PTSD 20 Years Of Priority Review Vouchers, A Tool For Spurring Needed Drugs Rotavirus Is Surging Across The US — Here’s What Parents Need To Know Leadership Dysfunctional In Healthcare: “Split The Baby” Thinking ‘Bedtime Stacking’ Trends On TikTok. Here Are The Risks Why Do Weight Loss Drugs Work For Some And Not Others? It’s In The Genes Hospital Safety: How to Avoid Medical Errors and Protect Yourself Medicare Can Save $4 Billion On Four Cancer Drugs — Can You Guess Which Ones? After 25 Years Of Consumer-Directed Healthcare, What’s Missing? This Sam Altman-Backed $1.8 Billion Startup Bets AI Can Get Drugs Through Clinical Trials Faster RFK Jr. Pushes To Expand Access To Peptides. A Doctor Explains The Risks How The Trump Administration Is Blocking Access To Home Care Genome Sequencing Solves Rare Disease Mysteries Breakthrough HIV Drug Is Out Of Reach For Many Who Need It Most New Drug Protects Against Life-Threatening Pancreatitis This Pill May Help Pancreatic Cancer Patients Live Longer What Should We Do When The Patient Is Racist? Attention Turns To UnitedHealth Earnings For Signs Of Insurer Rebound New Pancreatic Cancer Drug Nearly Doubles Survival. Here’s What Patients Should Know Why Sex Exists A Novel Approach To The Treatment Of Antibiotic Resistant Infections Democrat-Leaning Plan Takes Aim At Health Plans With New Regulations Trump Administration Weighs Default Medicare Advantage Plans For Seniors An AI System Passed Peer Review. 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First U.S. Patients Treated With Microrobotic Surgery For Alzheimer’s
Alex Knapp · 2026-05-07 · via Forbes - Healthcare

MMI CEO Mark Toland and his surgical robot

MMI

In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at the first human Alzheimer’s patients getting microrobotic surgery, Indian billionaire Dilip Shanghvi’s plans to expand his healthcare empire in the U.S., the hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship, and more. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here.

A clinical trial for the use of microrobots in treating Alzheimer’s disease kicked off with its first robotic-assisted procedure in human patients at Baptist Health in Jacksonville, Florida. The first patient, treated on Thursday, had moderate Alzheimer’s disease–the dementia that leads to devastating memory loss and affects 7 million people in the U.S. alone–and confirmed abnormalities in their deep cervical lymph node region. Two additional patients with moderate Alzheimer’s underwent the procedure on Monday. Microrobot maker MMI (Medical Microinstruments Inc.) expects to ultimately enroll 15 patients and follow them for 12 months after their operations. The goal of the surgery is to clear drainage pathways to the patients’ brains, helping their own lymphatic systems flush the toxins that scientists believe are hallmarks of the disease.

Alzheimer’s has long confounded researchers, and efforts to develop treatments for it have resulted in a graveyard of failures, but fixing the brain’s “plumbing” with surgeries or drugs has attracted increased attention recently. This has left scientists viewing MMI’s wildly experimental operation (which Forbes profiled earlier this year) with a mix of skepticism and hope. While MMI’s studies are very early stage, they build off reports from some 5,000 experimental surgeries performed in China and other Asian countries over the past five years that have shown remarkable, if largely anecdotal, results.

MMI, which has raised $220 million from investors that include Fidelity, Deerfield Management and RA Capital at a valuation around $500 million, designed robots that use the smallest surgical instruments in the world that can hold tiny needles the size of eyelashes and scissors and dilators roughly the width of a human hair. That’s crucial because the lymph vessels in the neck that surgeons operate on can be as small as 0.2 millimeters in diameter (about as thick as two sheets of paper).

The company, which was founded in Italy in 2015, already sells its precision robots for nerve repair and clearing fluid buildup in the arms and legs caused by lymphedema. It got the okay from the FDA in November to proceed with the Alzheimer’s study with a goal of first showing that the procedure is safe. If the trial is successful, it hopes to begin a large-scale clinical trial with a few hundred patients later this year. The first patient went home over the weekend, and, CEO Mark Toland says, was singing songs in the car there–a positive sign. As Toland told Forbes: “These are the patients that really don’t have a treatment option now. If they can get this procedure done and see the impact, it’s groundbreaking.”


Indian Billionaire Dilip Shanghvi Doubles Down On The U.S.

Dilip Shanghvi, executive chairman of Sun Pharmaceutical Industries.

Courtesy of Sun Pharmaceutical

Indian billionaire Dilip Shanghvi is doubling down on the United States. Last week, the company he controls, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, agreed to buy publicly traded women’s health company Organon in a deal valued at $11.8 billion.

Sun Pharma first entered the U.S. in 1998 with the acquisition of Caraco Pharmaceuticals; last year, it bought skin cancer drug company Checkpoint Therapeutics for $355 million. In its latest fiscal year (ended March 31, 2025), the American market accounted for roughly one-third of its more than $6 billion in revenue. With the purchase, Sun’s annual revenue will more than double to $12.4 billion, making it one of the world’s top 25 drugmakers–and tilting its business further to the U.S.

Shanghvi called the Organon deal “a significant opportunity” that can help the company create a “stronger and more diversified platform.” Now 70 and one of the world’s wealthiest healthcare entrepreneurs (worth $25.8 billion), he started Sun Pharmaceuticals in 1983 with a $200 loan from his father. “Our story is all about incremental growth,” he told Forbes in 2008. “We’re not looking for big leaps; we prefer small jumps.”


Cruise Ship Hantavirus Is A Rare–And Deadly–Strain

Three people on a cruise ship have died and five more have been sickened, apparently from a hantavirus infection. The ship, MV Hondias, left Argentina with 149 passengers and crew on April 1 for the Canary Islands, visiting other islands along the way. It is currently traveling to dock in the Canary Islands, pending clearance.

Hantavirus infections, typically spread through contact with rodents like rats or mice, are relatively rare but can cause severe complications depending on the strain of the virus. In the United States, the most common strain is hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a severe flu-like illness. In Europe and Asia, strains typically cause a hemorrhagic fever that can harm the kidneys. There are currently no FDA-approved vaccines or treatments for these infections, though new research into hantavirus structures published earlier this year may provide keys to developing them.

While hantavirus is most commonly transmitted from rodents, there is one exception: a rare strain known as the Andes virus, found in South America, which can spread from person-to-person and has a 40% mortality rate. The World Health Organization confirmed today that the outbreak on the cruise ship was the Andes virus. An international team led by the public health agency is currently investigating the outbreak and evacuating and treating patients as needed. Although concerning, the disease requires close contact to spread, making a major outbreak unlikely as health authorities work to contain it.


Deal of the Week

Kanvas Biosciences, which is creating microbiome-based treatments for cancer and other diseases, raised $48 million led by DCVC and Lion’s Capital with additional investment from the Gates Foundation and others. That brings the Princeton, N.J.-based biotech’s total funding to $78 million at a valuation that Kanvas declined to disclose. The company plans to use the funds to support ongoing phase 1 clinical trials for two of its drug candidates: one to treat colitis caused by cancer immunotherapies, and the other to treat refractory cancers in concert with other medicines. (Forbes covered the company’s seed round in 2024.)

Microbiome-based treatments have faced uphill challenges over the past decade, with seemingly promising solutions failing in clinical trials. Kanvas’s cofounder and CEO Matthew Cheng told Forbes that his company’s spatial imaging techniques should help. The company has built what he likens to a “Google Maps” that can identify promising strains of gut bacteria that can act in concert with each other to improve patients’ health. Kanvas can make pills that contain 145 bacterial strains, an order of magnitude higher than many treatments that contain fewer than 10, Cheng said. These act as a less-risky alternative to a fecal transplant, he added, replacing a disordered microbiome with healthier gut bacteria. While this has conventionally been used to treat infections from the bacteria C. difficile, scientists are now experimenting with a wide range of applications, including support for cancer treatment as well as inflammatory bowel disorder, diabetes and food allergies.

“We are convinced that we have developed a therapy that can simulate the immune system in a particular way to make cancer therapy more effective and probably safer at the same time,” he said.


WHAT WE’RE READING

Changes to immigration policies are making the U.S. a less attractive place for international researchers in the life sciences, which could lead to a long-term brain drain.

Obesity has displaced cancer as the biggest contributor to pharma company’s R&D pipeline values, according to a new report from Deloitte. That’s partly because weight-loss drugs are also being investigated for treatment of other chronic diseases.

Biotech Latus Bio raised $42 million to begin clinical studies of its gene therapy for Huntington’s disease.

A minimally invasive alternative to open heart surgery for replacing aortic valves has gained popularity, but some patients find their new valves don’t work as well as they’d once hoped.

The Supreme Court temporarily restored the ability for providers to prescribe mifepristone – which is now used in the majority of abortions – through pharmacies or by mail through telehealth services after a lower court issued a ruling blocking such prescriptions without an in-person doctor visit.

State and local officials are scrambling to find financial support for hospitals hit by federal cuts to Medicaid of more than $900 billion over the next decade.


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