Features
Period power: is menstrual blood a missed opportunity in women’s health?
The inventor of the first FDA-approved diagnostic period pad believes menstrual blood is one of medicine’s most overlooked opportunities, with research indicating its clinical relevance for important biomarkers such as fertility, perimenopause and endometriosis, as well as the early detection of cervical cancer.
In January 2024, the company behind the world’s first diagnostic menstrual pad received its first FDA clearance. Its Q-Pad™ and A1c Test allows women with diabetes to monitor their glucose levels using menstrual blood samples, as an alternative to standard venous blood tests.
It’s been hailed as a groundbreaking solution for women living with diabetes, but this is just the beginning for Qvin, the company behind the Q-Pad. Getting the green light from the FDA marks a much broader opportunity for testing important biomarkers in millions more who menstruate across the globe.
For Qvin’s co-founder and CEO, Dr Sara Naseri, a medical doctor and scientist, who began researching the potential of menstrual blood for preventative healthcare and early disease detection almost a decade ago, it was an overlooked opportunity.
“We’re constantly getting information about what is going on in our body, we’re tracking our steps, our sleep, our pulse, our sweat and yet women bleed every month and we’d never thought about how we could make use of that,” Naseri tells Femtech World.
But convincing scientists that they should be studying something which in many cultures has traditionally been a taboo subject was not straightforward.
“It’s been very hard to break taboos in the medical community,” she admits. “When we first started, labs refused to run samples of menstrual blood, so we had to build our own clinical laboratory.”

Dr Sara Naseri, CEO and co-founder, Qvin.
So, how does it work?
Each Q-Pad includes a removable strip which collects the menstrual blood. Once it has a sufficient sample (usually after around two to four hours of wear), the strip is sent off to a CLIA-Certified (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments) laboratory for testing.
The Qvin A1c Q-Pad Test Kit measures average blood sugar over a three-month period, by testing the A1c biomarker for people with diabetes— one of the most commonly used tests to monitor diabetes and pre-diabetes. The individual receives their results via the Qvin app which they can then use to monitor their blood sugar over time as well as sharing the lab report with their clinician.
“It fits in with a woman’s day-to-day life and makes it easier for them to stay on top of their health,” says Naseri. “It is utilising what is already going on in the body.”

Photo supplied by Qvin.
Important biomarkers in menstrual blood
Naseri and her team have now collaborated with researchers at a number of leading academic institutions, including Stanford University School of Medicine, to prove the clinical relevance of menstrual blood for a number of important biomarkers.
As well as proving the Q-Pad’s efficacy for monitoring blood sugar levels in diabetes, they’ve published peer-reviewed research validating other biomarkers that can also be monitored, including anaemia, fertility, perimenopause, endometriosis, and thyroid health.
“Menstrual blood is blood,” Naseri explains. “You can find a lot of information that you would in systemic blood, but on top of that, you have very specific biomarkers for reproductive organs that you wouldn’t find elsewhere.”
She adds: “Right now, we’re just scratching the surface. We’re looking at how menstrual blood can be useful in many areas of women’s health.”

Photo supplied by Qvin.
A tool for the early detection of cervical cancer
One of the most promising areas of focus for Qvin is how the Q-Pad can be used to detect High-Risk Human Papillomavirus (HR-HPV), the leading cause of cervical cancer.
Its first study, funded by the Women’s Cancer Innovations Fund of Stanford University Cancer Institute, found that among women who tested positive for HPV, the menstrual pad showed “highly concordant results” compared with standard clinician-collected sampling such as the pap smear test—the most widely applied screening method for cervical cancer.
Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide and the second highest cause of women’s cancer-related mortality. While most cases are preventable through screening and access to appropriate treatment, many women face barriers in accessing regular pap tests, especially in developing countries where 80% of all cervical cancers occur.
The study found that overall 94% of participants preferred the menstrual pad over clinician-collected tests, while 12 patients were found to be positive for HPV on the menstrual pad sample but negative on the clinician-collected specimen.
This indicates a significant opportunity, Naseri says, to address some of the major challenges in the early detection and prevention of cervical cancer.
“Cervical cancer is very treatable, but many women do not have access to, or are not comfortable with pap smears for religious or cultural reasons. It’s an invasive procedure for a lot of women… and for those women the need is great,” she says.
A shift in perceptions
In October, Time Magazine named the Q-Pad one of its best inventions of 2024. It is among a number of other products in the femtech space using menstrual blood and menstruation products to help better detect and diagnose reproductive health conditions.
Daye has launched a diagnostic tampon, while theblood is developing a similar testing product that would make more holistic health recommendations based not just on biomarkers but cycle, nutrition, lifestyle and reported symptoms. The idea that menstrual blood is something to be ashamed of now seems a bit shortsighted.
“I have absolutely noticed a shift [in attitudes],” says Naseri.
“When I think about the early days of Qvin it was really difficult to have this conversation. If you look at what we’ve achieved, [now] it’s not about opinion, it’s about the data and I think that is something we’ll continue to see as we publish more. This is just the beginning.”
With so far to go in medicine’s understanding of women’s health, could menstrual blood be key to catching up?
The medical field in general is skewed to look at male biology for many reasons, which has led to a lack of research on menstrual health,” Naseri adds.
“I think could be the tool to accelerate our understanding and could give us an advantage in closing the gender health gap.”
Features
The hidden cost of “business as usual” in gynecologic surgery
A Common Surgery with Outsized Consequences
Hysterectomy and myomectomy are among the most frequently performed surgeries worldwide.
Minimally invasive and robotic approaches have delivered clear benefits at the point of care, including shorter hospital stays, faster recovery, and fewer complications.
To remove the uterus or fibroids through small incisions, surgeons use a technique known as morcellation, in which tissue is cut into smaller pieces for extraction during surgery.
However, when tissue is cut without containment, those short-term gains can be offset by downstream harm.
The risks fall into three interconnected categories:
- dissemination of undiagnosed malignancy
- spread of benign tissue, including endometriosis and parasitic fibroids
- legal and financial exposure linked to off-label device use
Crucially, these costs often surface years after the original procedure and rarely where the original cost savings were realized.
Cancer Dissemination: A Known and Preventable Risk
The risk of occult uterine malignancy in women undergoing surgery for presumed benign fibroids is well documented.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has estimated this risk at approximately 1 in 350 women, prompting repeated safety communications recommending tissue containment during morcellation.
When morcellation is performed without containment, undiagnosed cancer will be dispersed throughout the abdominal cavity, effectively upstaging disease from localised to disseminated.
The clinical implications are profound, and so are the economic consequences.
Treatment costs for early-stage uterine cancer typically range from $40,000 to $60,000. Once disease becomes disseminated, costs can exceed $150,000 to $300,000, excluding indirect costs such as lost productivity, long-term disability, and caregiver burden.
Beyond treatment expenses, litigation related to morcellation-associated cancer spread has resulted in multi-million-dollar settlements, particularly during the power morcellation litigation wave of the mid-2010s. Several cases explicitly tied disease progression to tissue dissemination during surgery.
From a system perspective, a single preventable dissemination event can negate the cost savings of hundreds of minimally invasive procedures.
Benign Tissue Seeding: The Long Tail of Surgical Cost
Cancer is not the only concern.
Uncontained morcellation has also been associated with the spread of benign tissue, including parasitic fibroids and iatrogenic endometriosis, conditions that may present years after the index surgery.
Endometriosis alone represents one of the most expensive chronic gynecologic conditions. Multiple health economic studies estimate annual per-patient costs of $12,000 to $16,000, with lifetime costs exceeding $100,000, driven by repeat surgeries, chronic pain management, hormonal therapy, and fertility interventions.
While the financial impact may surface years later, downstream harm is increasingly traced back to the index procedure, including the choice between FDA-cleared containment and off-label alternatives used during tissue extraction.
Off-Label Use and the Quiet Accumulation of Liability
One of the least visible, but most consequential, dimensions of morcellation risk lies in off-label device use.
Many tissue bags currently used during morcellation are not FDA-cleared for prevention of tissue spillage during organ cutting and removal. While off-label use is common in medicine, it carries distinct legal and financial implications when complications occur.
Risk management guidance from MedPro Group, one of the largest medical malpractice insurers in the United States, has repeatedly warned that off-label use increases professional liability exposure in three key ways:
1. Burden of justification
When an FDA-cleared alternative exists, the legal burden shifts to the surgeon to prove that off-label use met the standard of care.
2. Informed consent vulnerability
Standard consent language may be insufficient for off-label device use, increasing exposure to failure-to-warn claims if complications arise.
3. Changed liability dynamics
Off-label use alters traditional liability dynamics, increasing scrutiny on clinical decision-making at the hospital and surgeon level.
Legal scholarship published in Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research has echoed these concerns, noting that courts increasingly allow off-label status to be considered in malpractice cases, particularly when patient harm occurs and safer alternatives were available.
Recent U.S. court decisions have further reinforced that while off-label use is generally permitted, it is not immune from civil liability and, in rare but serious circumstances, criminal consequences when tied to demonstrable patient harm.
FDA Guidance Exists, Adoption Lags Behind
Regulatory expectations around morcellation are no longer ambiguous. The FDA has consistently called for tissue containment during tissue cutting to mitigate the risks of cancer and tissue dissemination.
Yet real-world adoption remains inconsistent.
A 2025 survey reported by News-Medical found widespread gaps in safe tissue containment during laparoscopic gynecologic surgery.
Respondents cited variability in training, institutional protocols, and access to FDA-cleared containment systems. Many surgeons reported reliance on improvised or non-cleared solutions despite growing awareness of regulatory and legal risk.
The result is a widening gap between guidance and practice, one that is increasingly visible to regulators, insurers, and hospital leadership.
Who Ultimately Pays?
The economic impact of uncontained morcellation does not fall on a single stakeholder.
- Hospitals face litigation exposure, rising malpractice premiums, re-operations, and reputational risk.
- Surgeons shoulder personal liability, heightened scrutiny around informed consent, and evolving standards of care.
- Payers absorb downstream oncology costs, chronic disease management, and repeat interventions.
- Patients bear the heaviest burden, including preventable morbidity, fertility loss, financial toxicity, and erosion of trust.
Taken together, these costs far exceed the price of prevention.
From Clinical Risk to Market Response
This growing recognition of risk has begun to reshape the market.
Before regulatory scrutiny intensified, power morcellation was widely adopted because it saved time, reduced operating room burden, and supported high procedural throughput.
It represented a multi-billion-dollar global market, supported by major surgical device manufacturers and deeply embedded in minimally invasive gynecologic practice.
The withdrawal of power morcellation from many hospitals did not eliminate the clinical need for efficient tissue extraction. Instead, it created a prolonged gap between surgical efficiency and acceptable risk.
That gap is now beginning to close.
With the emergence of FDA-cleared tissue containment systems designed specifically for morcellation, hospitals are reassessing whether power morcellation can be responsibly reintroduced in a manner aligned with regulatory guidance, patient safety, and liability mitigation.
This has significant implications for operating room efficiency, surgeon ergonomics, and system-wide cost management.
One example is Ark Surgical, a U.S.-focused surgical technology company advancing safety-first approaches to tissue extraction.
Its double-wall, airbag-like LapBox containment chamber was developed to support FDA-aligned morcellation while integrating into existing laparoscopic workflows, an increasingly important consideration as hospitals evaluate not just procedural efficiency, but long-term risk exposure.
Ark Surgical is currently in an active investment round, reflecting broader investor interest in technologies that address regulatory-driven risk while unlocking previously constrained markets.
More broadly, capital is flowing toward solutions that make it possible to restore clinical efficiency without reintroducing legacy risk.
The Cost Question Is No Longer “If,” but “When”
Healthcare systems already absorb the cost of uncontained morcellation through litigation, chronic disease management, repeat interventions, and loss of trust.
What has changed is visibility.
As clinical data, regulatory expectations, and market solutions converge, the question is no longer whether containment matters, but whether healthcare systems can afford to continue treating it as optional.
Features
Innovation cuts ovarian cancer risk by nearly 80%
A surgical procedure developed in Canada reduces the risk of the most common and deadly form of ovarian cancer by nearly 80 per cent.
The strategy, known as opportunistic salpingectomy (OS), removes the fallopian tubes during routine gynaecological surgery such as hysterectomy (womb removal) or tubal ligation (having one’s tubes tied).
The study analysed population health data for more than 85,000 people who had gynaecological surgeries in British Columbia between 2008 and 2020, comparing rates of serous ovarian cancer with those who had similar operations without the procedure.
Researchers at the University of British Columbia found that people who had opportunistic salpingectomy were 78 per cent less likely to develop serous ovarian cancer, the most common and deadly subtype.
In the rare cases where ovarian cancer occurred after the procedure, those cancers were found to be less biologically aggressive.
Co-senior author Gillian Hanley is an associate professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of British Columbia.
She said: “This study clearly demonstrates that removing the fallopian tubes as an add-on during routine surgery can help prevent the most lethal type of ovarian cancer,.
“It shows how this relatively simple change in surgical practice can have a profound and life-saving impact.”
British Columbia became the first jurisdiction in the world to offer opportunistic salpingectomy in 2010, after researchers discovered that most ovarian cancers originate in the fallopian tubes rather than the ovaries.
The procedure leaves the ovaries in place, preserving hormone production so side effects are minimal.
The approach was initially developed by Dianne Miller, an associate professor emerita at the University of British Columbia and gynaecological oncologist with Vancouver Coastal Health and BC Cancer.
“If there is one thing better than curing cancer it’s never getting the cancer in the first place,” said Miller.
Since its introduction in British Columbia in 2010, opportunistic salpingectomy has been widely adopted, with approximately 80 per cent of hysterectomies and tubal ligation procedures in the province now including fallopian tube removal.
Professional medical organisations in 24 countries now recommend the procedure as an ovarian cancer prevention strategy, including the Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of Canada, which issued guidance in 2015.
“This is the culmination of more than a decade of work that started here in B.C.,” said co-senior author David Huntsman, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and obstetrics and gynaecology at the University of British Columbia.
“The impact of OS that we report is even greater than we expected.”
British Columbia recently became the first province to expand opportunistic salpingectomy to routine surgeries performed by general and urological surgeons through a project supported by the Government of British Columbia and Doctors of BC.
Features
AI mammography leads to fewer advanced breast cancers, study finds
AI mammography finds more cancers at screening and cuts diagnoses between screens by 12 per cent, a major trial has found.
The study involving over 100,000 Swedish women is described as the first randomised controlled trial investigating the use of AI in a national breast cancer screening programme.
Women who underwent AI-supported screening were less likely to be diagnosed with more aggressive and advanced breast cancer in the two years following, compared with standard mammography read by two radiologists.
The research was led by Lund University in Sweden.
Lead author Dr Kristina Lång said: “Our study is the first randomised controlled trial investigating the use of AI in breast cancer screening and the largest to date looking at AI use in cancer screening in general.
“It finds that AI-supported screening improves the early detection of clinically relevant breast cancers which led to fewer aggressive or advanced cancers diagnosed in between screenings.
“Widely rolling out AI-supported mammography in breast cancer screening programmes could help reduce workload pressures amongst radiologists, as well as helping to detect more cancers at an early stage, including those with aggressive subtypes.
“However, introducing AI in healthcare must be done cautiously, using tested AI tools and with continuous monitoring in place to ensure we have good data on how AI influences different regional and national screening programmes and how that might vary over time.”
Between April 2021 and December 2022, women who were part of mammography screening at four sites in Sweden were randomly assigned to either AI-supported screening or standard double reading by radiologists without AI.
In the AI-supported group, a specialist system analysed the mammograms and triaged low-risk cases to single reading and high-risk cases to double reading performed by radiologists. AI was also used to highlight suspicious findings in the image.
During the two-year follow-up, there were 1.55 interval cancers per 1,000 women in the AI-supported group, compared with 1.76 per 1,000 women in the control group.
Interval cancers are those diagnosed after a negative screen and before the next scheduled appointment, and are often more aggressive than cancers detected during routine screening.
Additionally, there were 16 per cent fewer invasive cancers, 21 per cent fewer large cancers, and 27 per cent fewer aggressive sub-type cancers in the AI group. The rate of false positives was similar for both groups.
Jessie Gommers is first author and PhD student at Radboud University Medical Centre in the Netherlands, said:
Gommers said: “Our study does not support replacing healthcare professionals with AI as the AI-supported mammography screening still requires at least one human radiologist to perform the screen reading, but with support from AI.
“However, our results potentially justify using AI to ease the substantial pressure on radiologists’ workloads, enabling these experts to focus on other clinical tasks, which might shorten the waiting times for patients.
Dr Lång added: “Further studies on future screening rounds with this group of women and cost-effectiveness will help us understand the long-term benefits and risks of using AI-supported mammography screening.
“If they continue to suggest favourable outcomes for AI-supported mammography screening compared with standard screening, there could be a strong case for using AI in widespread mammography screening, especially as we face staff shortages.”
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