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They create novel devices that enable real-time biopsies, light the way for robotic surgery, and help independent-minded teens manage their asthma.
They develop new technologies to target the delivery of drug therapies with unprecedented accuracy, to help stroke victims regain their sight, and to vaccinate people with a simple, wearable skin patch that could reach global populations.
Lisa Beck, Danielle Benoit, Paula Doyle, Hyekyun Rhee, Krystel Huxlin, and Jannick Rolland: six women faculty members whose work spans the River 人妻少妇专区 and the Medical Center. They鈥檙e among a growing group of women inventors at Rochester who are integral to the University鈥檚 success as a Tier I research institution.
According to a World Intellectual Property Organization survey of academic institutions worldwide, roughly half of Rochester-affiliated patent applicants are women, and the University ranked among the top five academic institutions in the United States, and top 40 worldwide, for the percentage of women patent applicants from 2011 to 2015.
Notably, women inventors are breaking through gender barriers not only in science but also in business. Rolland, the Brian J. Thompson Professor of Optical Engineering, is cofounder and chief technology officer of LightopTech. Doyle, an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology, is cofounder and chief medical officer of Endoglow.
Doyle praises colleagues who allowed her the flexibility to get Endoglow started. 鈥淲ithout their support I wouldn鈥檛 have been able to really pursue this,鈥 she says.
鈥淚t is a whole different skill set being on the business side of things,鈥 she adds. But it鈥檚 a role she鈥檇 like to see more medical professionals pursue.
鈥淚t shouldn鈥檛 be industry coming to us and saying, 鈥楬ere, you need this.鈥 It should be the other way around, with doctors and nurses saying, 鈥楬ey, this is what we need; let鈥檚 develop it.鈥 鈥
Jannick Rolland
Brian J. Thompson Professor of Optical Engineering

After finishing as valedictorian in a two-year physics program at the Institut Universitaire de Technologie in Orsay, France, Jannick Rolland, who had once also been on the verge of a professional career in dance, remained in Orsay to enroll in a graduate program鈥攖he equivalent of a master鈥檚 degree鈥攁t the Institut D鈥橭ptique.
Then she set her sights on the United States.
She wanted to improve her English and applied to the University of Arizona鈥檚 distinguished optics program. But she was three points shy of passing Arizona鈥檚 required oral language exam.
She got on a plane anyway. After landing in Tucson, she marched to the admissions office and literally 鈥渢alked her way鈥 into the university. Within months she was being encouraged to join the PhD program in optical engineering.
The experience was eye opening. Some of the instruction at the Institut d鈥橭ptique had been 鈥渁 little too much 鈥榩ush button鈥 for me,鈥 Rolland says. 鈥淲e were not encouraged to ask questions outside the box, just solve the problem in the typical way, just get the results.鈥
She experienced a far different approach at the University of Arizona鈥檚 Optical Sciences Center.
鈥淚 was surrounded by researchers who were very excited about what they were doing and really engaged in it,鈥 Rolland says. 鈥淎nd the professors encouraged us to ask questions of all sorts.鈥
Rolland is now the Brian J. Thompson Professor of Optical Engineering at Rochester. She has 35 patents to her credit and has been listed among eight women pioneers in augmented and virtual reality by the organizers of the world鈥檚 largest AR/VR conference and expo.
She鈥檚 also the director of the Center for Freeform Optics, a federally supported collaboration involving Rochester, the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, and 18 companies and research institutes.
Freeform optics is an emerging technology that uses lenses and mirrors with freeform surfaces to create optical devices that are lighter, more compact, and more effective than ever before. According to Rolland, the technology 鈥渋s poised to revolutionize instrumentation from space optics to microscopy.鈥
She adds that she was able to launch the center with the help of her colleagues and what she terms the strong 鈥渆cosystem鈥 for biomedical development at Rochester.
That ecosystem is what helped her take the liquid lens technology, which she developed before she came to Rochester in 2009, and refine its biomedical applications.
Rolland and her former PhD student Cristina Canavesi have cofounded LightopTech, a startup commercializing one of Rolland鈥檚 inventions: a portable device that uses a microscope with a liquid lens to image cells just below the surface of the skin, cornea, and other tissues. Among many possible applications, the device is targeted to help surgeons determine if they鈥檝e successfully removed all of a skin cancer, without having to wait for the results of a traditional biopsy.
She鈥檚 had her share of inspirational colleagues. But for the 鈥渇irst time in my life,鈥 Rolland says, she finds herself surrounded by colleagues 鈥渨ho share common interests with me.鈥

Lisa Beck
Dean鈥檚 Professor, Department of Dermatology
Lisa Beck鈥檚 first research project鈥攆or AP biology in high school鈥攖ook place in the basement of her family鈥檚 home in Portville, New York, a small town with 鈥渙ne stoplight,鈥 she says.
From Portville, it was on to Mount Holyoke College, medical school at SUNY鈥揝tony Brook, a residency at Rochester, and a faculty position at Johns Hopkins University, where she spent most of her 17 years there in the Division of Allergy.
In 2006, she returned to Rochester, where now, as Dean鈥檚 Professor in the Department of Dermatology, she鈥檚 led in the creation of a skin patch that could protect entire populations in hard-pressed developing countries against yellow fever, malaria, West Nile, Zika, and chikungunya.
The skin patch is based on two key discoveries rooted in Beck鈥檚 research on atopic dermatitis. The most common form of eczema, atopic dermatitis is a chronic skin disease that causes lesions, itching, and outright misery in its sufferers.
Beck and members of her lab discovered a defective protein that appears to be responsible for creating the 鈥渓eaky鈥 skin that causes the condition.
Leaky skin occurs when 鈥渨ater comes out, which makes the skin dry, and allergens, microbes, and irritants get in and cause the characteristic inflammation of the disease,鈥 says Beck. Leaky skin provides an easy pathway for infection and disease.
In the meantime, Beck and her collaborators鈥擝en Miller, also a professor of dermatology, and Anna De Benedetto, formerly at Rochester, now associate professor of dermatology at the University of Florida鈥攆ound a peptide that can temporarily 鈥渞ecreate鈥 the same effect of having a faulty protein in healthy people as well.
That may not seem particularly helpful at first glance. But applied as part of a small wearable patch, the peptide can create temporary 鈥渓eaks鈥 in a very localized area of healthy skin. In doing so, it creates a perfect portal for vaccinating people as an alternative route for drug delivery.
The patch has worked in tissue cultures and in mice, thanks to the work of Matt Brewer, a postdoc in the Miller and Beck labs. 鈥淎nd the beauty of it is, when you remove the patch after 24 hours, the skin barrier recovers very nicely,鈥 Beck says.
Think of it: vaccination without the burden of painful hypodermics, which require expensive biohazard disposal and highly trained health care workers.
A patent has been issued in the US, and others are pending overseas.

Hyekyun Rhee
Endowed Chair for Nursing Science and Professor of Nursing
When Hyekyun Rhee would meet teens with asthma, she鈥檇 often hear them wheeze and cough. When she asked them if they were OK, they鈥檇 say, 鈥淚鈥檝e had this all my life, so I鈥檓 used to it.鈥
But Rhee knew she needed to come up with something鈥攕ome process, some device鈥攖hat would help teens better manage their asthma. Otherwise, the disease would continue to scar their lungs, turning healthy, flexible airways into rigid structures that would eventually cause far worse problems.
It would need to be something 鈥渃ool鈥 that would help teens overcome their sense of invulnerability and their reluctance to take their medications. Rhee decided to focus her research on asthma in part because her sister suffers from the condition. But she also 鈥渨anted to focus on something that affects a lot of teens.鈥
In her first faculty position, at the University of Virginia, she received funding for a peer-led asthma self-management program for teens. But it was hard to find enough teens to work with in Charlottesville. Rochester offered a larger population and pool of study participants鈥攁long with the prospect of collaborating with a senior investigator in the field. In 2007, she joined the faculty of the School of Nursing.
鈥淭eens love technology,鈥 Rhee says. And because most asthma symptoms are manifested in sounds, she came up with a novel idea: create a device that picks up those sounds, preferably in the form of an attractive pendant. It would connect to a mobile device that would then display the information, motivating teens to take medication to manage their symptoms.
Rhee found a collaborator across the street on the River 人妻少妇专区鈥擬ark Bocko, Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and chair of the department鈥攚hose lab developed algorithms to recognize the signature of a wheeze or cough. 鈥淚nitially, we used an iPod for the detection and display of the symptoms,鈥 Rhee says. Then, the technology was patented and licensed to Health Care Originals, which has modified the technology into a free-standing mobile device that can detect asthma symptoms along with other vital signs such as heart rate, respiratory rate, and body temperature.
But Rhee鈥檚 work isn鈥檛 over yet. A feasibility study has shown that the device works and that 鈥渢eens and parents love it,鈥 Rhee says. But clinical trials are necessary to determine whether its use will actually compel teens to manage their asthma, and thus improve their symptoms. Calling the technology 鈥渕y baby,鈥 Rhee says she鈥檚 gearing up to conduct those trials.

Paula Doyle
Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology
After five years in fashion design, working as a top assistant for Paris Collections, Paula Doyle decided it was time for a change. 鈥淚f the world suddenly dissolved, would you really care what designer pants you were wearing?鈥 she asks.
She decided to pursue a medical career. And today, her willingness to embrace new challenges, to abruptly switch course along a career path that has been 鈥渢o the left and right, and up and down,鈥 is why she is a surgeon, inventor, and chief medical officer of a startup company.
Doyle arrived at Rochester for a three-year fellowship in urogynecology, treating female urinary incontinence and pelvic floor dysfunction. She found herself doing surgery by robot. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like a video game,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou can control the robot with your hands, and when you look at the screen, the optics are really, really good鈥攂ut you can鈥檛 actually feel what you鈥檙e operating on.鈥
During one surgery, Doyle needed to peel a bladder from scar tissue it was sitting on. It took a long time to finally figure out where to start. At a meeting of other fellows and their faculty mentors, she described how difficult the case had been and commented, 鈥淚 wish I had a flashlight or something I could insert so I could see better.鈥 Ron Wood and Jay Reeder, both research professors in obstetrics and gynecology, seized on the idea, and soon Wood, Reeder, and Doyle began 鈥渉ashing out ideas鈥 to turn her 鈥渃omplaint鈥 into a viable prototype.
At the same time that Doyle completed her fellowship and joined the University as a surgeon and assistant professor, the problem she had identified in the operating room had resulted in a patented device called the GreenEgg. It is a small disposable device that uses a fluorescing polymer that can illuminate internal anatomy when near-infrared light is also used. For example, it provides backlighting that allows surgeons to see scarring and other pathologies deeper in the tissue than expected.
With the support of her supervisors, Doyle is working part time as an assistant professor, so she can spend more time as chief medical officer of Endoglow, the startup she and Reeder cofounded.
To her, her role in the company is a natural outgrowth of her physician鈥檚 role鈥攁nd a type of function more physicians should consider performing.
鈥淚 really do believe in women鈥檚 health,鈥 Doyle says, 鈥渁nd I think that physicians should be the ones to initiate progress, whether it鈥檚 in drugs or medical devices. It shouldn鈥檛 be industry coming to us and saying, 鈥楬ere, you need this.鈥 It should be the other way around, with doctors and nurses saying, 鈥楬ey, this is what we need; let鈥檚 develop it.鈥 It should be inside out, not outside in.鈥

Danielle Benoit
Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Danielle Benoit says she was 鈥渁lways tinkering鈥 as a kid growing up in Maine. She remembers tagging along at work with her father, a forester who worked essentially as a civil engineer, designing remote logging roads for his company. 鈥淚 remember all the survey equipment and other gadgets he had. I thought that was really cool,鈥 she says.
Benoit became the first student to graduate in bioengineering from the University of Maine and went on to earn a PhD in chemical engineering at the University of Colorado. As a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington, she developed a delivery system for nucleic acid drugs used in cancer therapy.
Rochester sought to recruit her鈥攁nd did so successfully in 2010. Benoit says the close proximity of the Medical Center to the biomedical engineering department was 鈥渃ritical鈥 in her decision to accept a faculty position in biomedical engineering. So, too, was the number of women in the department.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just women who were junior faculty members, but women who were senior and very well established, and who had thriving research programs,鈥 she says.
Before joining the department, she had already met with Edward Puzas, the Donald and Mary Clark Professor in Orthopaedics at the Medical Center and an expert in bone remodeling. Puzas pursued exactly the kind of basic science research that could help her advance her work in tissue regeneration as well as the targeted delivery of therapeutic drugs that she began as a postdoc.
Puzas had discovered 鈥渁 fantastic way to target bone drug delivery to exactly where it鈥檚 needed,鈥 Benoit says. Working with Puzas, she and members of her lab began to design a nanoparticle-sized polymer drug-delivery device that could be loaded with therapeutic drugs to enhance the bone rebuilding process鈥攊n the case of a fracture鈥攐r to boost the performance of cells that aid in bone formation鈥攊n the case of osteoporosis or chronic bone thinning.
The result was US Patent #9,949,950: 鈥淐ompositions and Methods for Controlled Localized Delivery of Bone Forming Therapeutic Agents,鈥 one of nine approved or pending patents Benoit has coauthored.
Benoit is dedicated to schooling her students鈥攖he PhD students in her lab as well as more than 80 undergraduates she has mentored since arriving at Rochester鈥攊n how to disclose technologies developed in an academic lab and how to secure patents for them. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 critical, if we want to see what we have developed become a product that鈥檚 going to help people,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take an investment in safety and efficacy studies and clinical trials, and so much development that is beyond the scope of what we can do in our labs.鈥

Krystel Huxlin
James V. Aquavella, M.D. Professor in Ophthalmology
When Krystel Huxlin arrived at Rochester in 1995, she intended to stay only two years.
Born in Romania, she had grown up in Europe and in Australia, where she studied neuroscience at the University of Sydney with pioneering vision scientist Ann Sefton. She culminated her studies with a prestigious, four-year early career fellowship, which allowed her to spend the first two years overseas.
Huxlin chose Rochester, where she studied with William Merigan and Tatiana Pasternak, professors of ophthalmology, neurobiology, and anatomy and both long-standing members of the Center for Visual Science. Meanwhile, she met Keith Nehrke 鈥94, now her husband and a professor of medicine in the Nephrology Unit. She decided to forfeit the last two years of her fellowship and stay at Rochester鈥攏ot to abandon a career but rather to thrive in one.
鈥淎s a new faculty member in the Flaum Eye Institute, I became plugged in immediately with the Center for Visual Science, which has been vital to me and my work,鈥 says Huxlin, who is now the James V. Aquavella, M.D. Professor in Ophthalmology.
Her research is helping stroke survivors who have suffered vision loss and promises better treatments for myopia patients worldwide.
For stroke victims, she has developed a 鈥減hysical therapy鈥 for the visual system. A set of exercises that stimulates use of visual information by undamaged portions of the visual cortical system, it helps the visual system relearn to interpret signals from a blind zone. The technology has been patented and licensed to Envision Solutions, which is running a three-site clinical trial with the technology.
Huxlin is also collaborating with Gabriel Diaz鈥檚 PerForM Lab at nearby Rochester Institute of Technology to develop virtual reality headsets with integrated eye tracking that patients can use at home鈥攔endering in-home, long-term therapy as effective as that performed in Huxlin鈥檚 lab.
And working with colleagues at the Center for Visual Science, she鈥檚 helping to improve Lasik surgery, potentially transforming the way human vision is corrected. Her insights were instrumental in developing a technology, now licensed to the startup Clerio Vision, that will lead to individually customized vision corrections not only in contact and intraocular lenses but also directly into patients鈥 corneas. Critically, it can accomplish the task without having to cut eye tissue, as current Lasik surgery requires, a factor that prevents many people from electing to have the procedure.
鈥淭his technology could totally revolutionize the approach and feasibility of laser refractive correction,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd considering the myopia epidemic that is developing worldwide, it is not a moment too soon.鈥