Portfolio

Continale Medical

Device to alleviate stress urinary incontinence (SUI).

Technology Development

Business Development

Revenue

Exited

Visit Website
Founded

2018

CEO
UN SDGs
Contact Us
email
Follow Us
Investors
Trendlines Medical Singapore, Singapore-Israel Industrial Research & Development (SIIRD) Foundation

About

Continale has developed a user-friendly device that provides a safe, minimally invasive solution with high patient compliance that mitigates involuntary urinary leakage associated with stress urinary incontinence (SUI).

The device answers a clear unmet need to reduce urinary leakage while maintaing high patient compliance and safety. The handheld device introduces a small amount of gas (25-50 cc) into the urinary bladder via a single-use (disposable) sterile applicator. The gas acts as “shock absorber” to counteract any pressure (stress) applied on the bladder and therefore prevent involuntary urine leakage.

Continale Medical’s product idea was conceived by Trendlines Innovation Labs. Prototypes were developed in partnership with clinicians from the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) and with funding from the Singapore-Israel Industrial Research & Development (SIIRD) Foundation.

Market Need

Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a condition of involuntary leakage of urine upon exertion such as laughing, coughing, sneezing, or physical activity. The increased abdominal pressure exerted on the bladder during such instances causes urine to leak. SUI occurs more commonly in women than men, and accounts for 51% of urinary incontinence cases in women. Globally, it is estimated that more than 200 million women suffer from this condition.

Although not a life-threatening condition, SUI greatly affects quality of life. People with the condition may suffer embarrassment to the point where they limit their work or social life, especially exercise and leisure activities.

Current non-surgical/conservative treatments are few, suboptimal, and have low success rates. These include lifestyle changes, pelvic floor exercise,s and the use of urethral/vaginal inserts and pessaries. Surgery or other more invasive options are usually recommended for severe cases of SUI. Along with a low treatment success rate, some of these solutions also cause discomfort, pain or urinary tract infections.

Skip to content