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BMH-NM among first in Region to Use New Lung Cancer Diagnosis Technology

Doctors Jeff Evans, Jennifer Gardner and Stacey Miller are among the first in Mississippi to use a new robotic bronchoscopy procedure to help detect lung cancer earlier. Photo provided by BMH.

Baptist Memorial Hospital-North Mississippi physicians are among the first in Mississippi to use a new robotic bronchoscopy procedure to help detect lung cancer earlier.

Combining the latest advancements in robotics, software, data science and endoscopy, Auris Healthโ€™s Monarch Platformโ€™s robotic bronchoscopy system allows surgeons to remove and biopsy nodules, or tumors, in the lungs that are small and hard to see or difficult to reach, ultimately leading to a more accurate and earlier diagnosis.

โ€œLung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, in part because it has little to no symptoms in its earliest stages,โ€ said Dr. Jennifer Gardner, a pulmonologist with Oxford Pulmonology. โ€œBecause this new technology provides improved access and vision for bronchoscopy procedures, it holds potential to help us make a diagnosis earlier and, hopefully, treat more patients successfully.โ€

Statistics show that more than 90% of patients diagnosed with lung cancer do not survive because diagnosis isnโ€™t typically made until the advanced stages of the disease.

Since February, Baptist North Mississippi has performed four procedures with the technology.

Baptist North Mississippi, a 217-bed hospital in Oxford, Mississippi, is a regional referral
center that offers a variety of services, including cardiovascular surgery, neurosurgery, home care
and hospice, a 24-hour emergency room, a weight loss center, a heartburn treatment center and a
wound care center.

For more information, call 662-636-1000 or visit northmiss.baptistonline.org.