June of 2013 was the first post on this thread about the device.
Thinking we'll be wearing this thing next year? I've got a bridge to sell you.
Need to be realistic and look at all options, and not hang our hat on just one.
Don't get me wrong, if it comes out tomorrow I'm signing up to try it. But it's been a decade. A decade.
A decade of development and studies.
We need to remember, this is a University venture. Not some multi-national medical device manufacturer that has a budget of £150M to funnel into this project alone. It's been a decade of researching the actual science behind tinnitus, animal studies and models, device development for humans and 2 clinical trials.
Just to put things into perspective. I regularly work with PhD students in the medical device field, and a PhD project is usually extremely narrow - nothing like developing a brand new technology like this. One of the recent ones I was involved with looked at blood platelet aggregation at various steps of chemotherapy/radiotherapy/immunotherapy. This took 4 years just to
observe something and draw conclusions from it.
So 10 years to study the science behind this condition, locate the problematic area of the brain, prove your theories in animals, develop a device that should work on humans, prove your device works twice over and then get ready for regulatory submission is really quite good going for a University. Had this been a private company with many staff devoted to this 24/7 rather than having other job responsibilities outside of their research working at a University, we'd maybe be looking at those timelines halved, but then we've seen with Lenire that private companies have a vested interest to hit market whether it works or not.
Whether she's worked on this for 10 years or 20 years doesn't matter, the point is the same. None of us on this forum are as brilliant in the area of brain disorders/tinnitus as Dr. Shore's team. If we were, we'd be on it. This will be a bitter pill for some, but as much as great discussion takes place here, we just regurgitate what we've read in publications or say "I think this and that has something to do with tinnitus". Easy to say, difficult to prove and ever harder to develop a treatment for.
I'm not saying this device works as we hope, or that it'll cure everybody and I'm going to completely discount Lenire in this statement... because well... duh. On paper, this looks to be the first of its kind. A treatment for a condition that is so misunderstood and dismissed by so many in the medical profession - "just get used to it, it's just a noise." I'm not saying Auricle will have manufacturing contracts in place to hit the ground running when they get FDA approval or that their process for hitting market will be streamlined and we'll all be happy. If they get approval and a year later this device is still not out, sure, tear them a new one because that's the easiest part of the whole journey.
But I feel like we're going down a path here of saying that this device has taken so long to come out just because Dr. Shore and her team have purposely taken their time and it's just not really a good look, especially when she's just taken part in a Q&A for us all.