Latest from 9 News

9 News
8 hours ago
- Health
- 9 News
'Game changer' device could hold key to early detection for Australia's deadliest cancer
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here Lung cancer has the highest mortality rate in Australia but now, a groundbreaking medical machine could be the key to early detection. It's the only one of it's kind in the country - a revolutionary robot called 'ION' - built in Brisbane and improving how biopsies are conducted, ultimately helping patients live longer. Four years ago, 61-year-old Ruanda found a nodule on her lung but her road to a diagnosis wasn't a walk in the park. Lung cancer has the highest mortality rate in Australia and now a groundbreaking medical machine could be the key to early detection. (9News) "My lung specialist then sent me for two normal bronchoscopies," she told 9News. "They couldn't get enough tissue to actually make a proper diagnosis." The Brisbane grandmother with a family history of cancer, was told to watch and wait but when it comes to cancer, early detection is key. "It was discovered it had actually doubled in size," she said. Months later, Ruanda found out she had non-smoking related lung cancer after it was detected by a groundbreaking robot at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital (RBWH). "It's very much a game changer," Dr David Fielding, RBWH Thoracic Physician said. It's the only one of it's kind in the country - a revolutionary robot called 'ION' - built in Brisbane and improving how biopsies are conducted, ultimately helping patients live longer. (9News) "The robot is a way of improving our precision and getting to these small spots, taking a biopsy and improving our knowledge of what it is." The 'ION' platform from Intuitive Surgical is ushering in a new era of robotic bronchoscopy. "[It'll] hopefully, increase the survival rate up to 60 or 70 per cent," RBWH Interventional Bronchology Director Dr Farzad Bashirzadeh told 9News. It works after a regular CAT scan is taken, then the computer maps out a virtual pathway through an individual's lungs and directs doctors through the real airway to reach the biopsy site more efficiently. More than 170 patients have already benefited from the revolutionary technology, with preliminary results showing the robot is twice as accurate as previous biopsy methods. More than 170 patients have already benefited from the revolutionary technology, with preliminary results showing the robot is twice as accurate as previous biopsy methods. (9News) "We would do it in a similar way [previously] but with a bronchoscope that we hold with our hand," Fielding explained. "[But with] the robot, you just drive it with a trackball, like a video game, and it stays still." Ultimately by helping to remove human error, it reduces the risk of a lung collapse. "On average [the old way] is about 25 per cent risk of pneumothorax, meaning collapsing lung," Bashirzadeh said. "But in this one it's less than one per cent." Ruanda is grateful the technology helped catch her cancer at stage one and she'll undergo surgery in the coming weeks. "This is definitely gonna help people get the answer at the right time," she said. national Australia health Health Services cancer Brisbane CONTACT US


9 News
10 hours ago
- 9 News
'Postcard Bandit' plotting a fresh bid for freedom
Australia's most notorious prison escapee, known as the 'Postcard Bandit', claims he's been falsely imprisoned in WA for almost a decade.


9 News
10 hours ago
- 9 News
Search for missing remains continues after reality TV personality charged with murder
A desperate search continued today in South Australia for the missing remains of Julian Story, after Beauty and the Geek star charged with his murder.


9 News
11 hours ago
- 9 News
Private investigation uncovers mystery bone fragment
A private investigation into the Adelaide Oval abduction mystery has uncovered an unusual piece of bone fragment, which forensic archaeologists believe could belong to human child.


9 News
11 hours ago
- Politics
- 9 News
Police investigate after body found on one of Melbourne's busiest streets
Former Greens candidate in hospital after Israel protest arrest Former Greens candidate Hannah Thomas, who ran against Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, "may lose the sight in one eye" after being injured in a protest in Sydney.