Using LED lights, NeoLight aims to help tens of thousands of newborns every year


neolight baby light treatment

Each year, around 60% of newborns will come into the world with jaundice, a condition that manifests as a yellowing of the baby’s skin. Infant jaundice is easily treatable and is often treated with phototherapy, which involves exposing the newborn to blue light for a few days after birth. But in parts of the developing world that lack access to electricity or medical supplies, tens of thousands of infants die or develop brain damage each year from untreated jaundice. 

Sivakumar Palaniswamy, a 2016 Arizona State University graduate with an MS in bioengineering, saw this tragedy firsthand while working in a hospital in India, where several newborns shared a single light. In the summer of 2014, Palaniswamy partnered with three then-fellow ASU students to found NeoLight, a medical startup aimed at eradicating deaths from infant jaundice with a new approach to phototherapy. 

“Siva saw a problem and it struck a chord in his heart,” said NeoLight CEO Vivek Kopparthi, ’14 MS in management. “When he returned to ASU, we started discussing this and applying the biomedical concepts we learned in school to engineer an efficient solution.”

NeoLight got an early boost with a $25,000 grant from ASU’s Edson Student Entrepreneur Initiative. The team parlayed the grant into a further $600,000 seed investment from angel investors in Phoenix that they used to navigate the complex regulatory approval process for medical devices; in 2017, the device was approved by the FDA. To date, the company has raised around $7.5 million from investors, including NFL quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, and has developed a partnership with Phoenix-based HonorHealth to further study the device.

Known as Skylife, the device uses LED-based phototherapy to treat infant jaundice in both hospitals and homes. LEDs are highly efficient, using 98% less electricity than a standard incubator, so they can be used in places without reliable electricity, and they don’t have many of the side effects of other phototherapy devices like excess heat that can dry a baby’s skin. Furthermore, the device has been shown to send jaundiced babies home from the hospital 40% faster than competitors’ products.

The company is also developing a diagnostic device that detects and monitors jaundice on the spot in newborns without the need for a lab test. With these devices, the NeoLight team hopes it will soon make untreated infant jaundice a thing of the past.  

Written by Daniel Oberhaus. He is a graduate of Barrett, The Honors College who earned a Bachelor of Arts in creative writing and philosophy in 2015, a staff writer at Wired magazine and the author of “Extraterrestrial Languages” (MIT Press). This story originally appeared in the spring 2020 issue of ASU Thrive magazine. 

Top photo: The FDA-approved Skylife, shown here under a baby, treats newborns for jaundice in homes or hospitals. The founders won a $25,000 grant from ASU’s Edson Student Entrepreneur Initiative and parlayed that into an additional $600,000 seed investment. Photo by Erika Gronek/ASU

More Science and technology

 

Female Mojave desert tortoise

Study reveals genetic insight into desert survival

The deserts of the American Southwest are home to the Mojave and Sonoran desert tortoises, two seemingly similar yet genetically distinct species of turtles. These tortoises, adapted to different…

Image of a human brain and a tractor.

Study reveals lasting effects of common weed killer on brain health

Environmental exposure to toxins in the air, water or certain chemicals can increase the risk of ill health effects, including to the human brain.The human brain is an incredibly adaptable organ,…

Portrait of Giavanna Caruth at a lab

ASU grad to use science to get an edge on crime

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable fall 2024 graduates.As a child growing up in Pinetop, Arizona, Giavanna Caruth's family experienced a tragic loss in the early…