Thomas Oxley (Mount Sinai Hospital)

Thomas Oxley is the chief executive officer of Synchron and neurointerventionist at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City,[1] who established the Vascular Bionics laboratory at the University of Melbourne and is currently co-head of this lab.[2] Since commencing his PhD, he has raised $12 million dollars in funding from US and Australian governments,[3] forming a lab for the development of a novel stent electrode (stentrode) neural interface. Oxley received substantial funding from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) for the research of a minimally-invasive neural interface technology, and subsequently founded Synchron, a company building next-generation brain computer interface solutions.

Oxley has been conducting research in motor systems since 2003. He conceived the idea for the Stentrode™ in 2007 and led the original team at the University of Melbourne that created the technology. Oxley’s team in Australia was the only non-US-based group funded by DARPA as part of the Reliable Neural-Interface Technology (RE-NET) program and led by Professor Jack Judy. In 2018, Dr. Oxley announced in a TEDxSyndey Talk[4] that the company, Synchron , would initiate clinical trials of the Stentrode device with the goal of assisting paralyzed patients to regain the ability to communicate.

His work has been published in major journals including Nature Biotechnology[5] and New England Journal of Medicine,[6] and he is the founder of three start-up companies: SmartStent (which was acquired by Synchron, Inc.[7]), VascuLab and Synchron.

In 2018, Oxley won the 2018 Global Australian Advance Award Winner,[8] an award given to celebrate international Australians who exhibit remarkable talent, exceptional vision and ambition, the UNESCO Netexplo award for Innovation,[9] and was a finalist for the Congress of Neurological Surgeons Innovator of the Year Award.[10]

Education

After earning bachelor degrees in medical science, medicine and surgery from the University of Monash in Melbourne Australia, Oxley earned doctorate degrees in philosophy and neuroscience from the University of Melbourne. His training included advanced MRI imaging analysis, hardware device (stent) development, and electrophysiological signal processing. Oxley completed residencies in both internal medicine and neurology, as well as a stroke fellowship. From 2015 – 2017, Oxley completed an endovascular neurosurgery fellowship at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York under Professor J. Mocco and Professor Alejandro Berenstein.

Scientific career

Dr Oxley has published 60 internationally peer reviewed articles that have accumulated 3478 citations, with 13 as first or last author and with an H Index of 11.

Honors and awards

  • 2018 GQ Australia Innovator of the Year finalist
  • 2018 Advance Global Overall Australian of the Year Award[8]
  • 2018 Advance Global Australia Award for Life Sciences[11]
  • 2018 Congress of Neurological Surgeons (USA), 2018 Innovator of the Year
  • 2018 UNESCO Netexplo award for Innovation, Paris, France[9]
  • 2017 Chancellor’s Prize for Excellence in a PhD Thesis, University of Melbourne
  • 2017 Dean’s Award for Excellence in a PhD Thesis, University of Melbourne
  • 2017 International INDEX Design Awards Finalist, Stentrode, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 2017 Graham Brown Best Publication Award, University of Melbourne
  • 2016 Premier’s Award (Victoria) for Health and Medical Research (PhD) commendation[12]
  • 2016 International Brain Computer Interface Award Finalist[13]
  • 2016 SMART 100 companies
  • 2016 Nomination for University of Melbourne Chancellor’s PhD Award
  • 2013 Warren Haynes Fellowship in Neurology
  • 2013 NHMRC Postgraduate Scholarship
  • 2013 Winner, MTGT Entrepreneurial Accelerator

References

  1. "Thomas Oxley at Mt. Sinai". www.mountsinai.org. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  2. "University of Melbourne Vascular Bionics Laboratory". medicine.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  3. "Thomas Oxley, University of Melbourne". findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  4. "A Digital Spinal Cord that Streams Your Thoughts". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  5. Oxley, Thomas. "Minimally Invasive Endovascular Stent-Electrode Array for High-Fidelity, Chronic Recordings of Cortical Neural Activity". nature.com. Nature Biotechnology. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  6. Campbell, Bruce C.V.; Mitchell, Peter J.; Kleinig, Timothy J.; Dewey, Helen M.; Churilov, Leonid; Yassi, Nawaf; Yan, Bernard; Dowling, Richard J.; Parsons, Mark W.; Oxley, Thomas J.; Wu, Teddy Y.; Brooks, Mark; Simpson, Marion A.; Miteff, Ferdinand; Levi, Christopher R.; Krause, Martin; Harrington, Timothy J.; Faulder, Kenneth C.; Steinfort, Brendan S.; Priglinger, Miriam; Ang, Timothy; Scroop, Rebecca; Barber, P. Alan; McGuinness, Ben; Wijeratne, Tissa; Phan, Thanh G.; Chong, Winston; Chandra, Ronil V.; Bladin, Christopher F.; et al. (2015). "Endovascular Therapy for Ischemic Stroke with Perfusion-Imaging Selection". New England Journal of Medicine. 372 (11): 1009–1018. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1414792. PMID 25671797.
  7. "Endovascular Start-Up Synchron, Inc. Appoints Neurovascular Veteran Martin Dieck as Chairman". businesswire.com. Business Wire. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  8. "Dr. Thomas Oxley Announced as Overall Winner in 2018 Advance Awards". advance.org. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  9. "Stentrode". netexplo.org. Netexplo Observatory. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  10. "Awards". cns.org. Congress of Neurological Surgeons. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  11. "Dr. Thomas Oxley". advance.org. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  12. "Honouring Victoria's Brightest Medical Researchers". premier.vic.gov.au. Delivering. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  13. "The Winners of the Annual BCI Award 2016". blog.gtec.at. G Tec. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
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