A Laser Focus on Melanoma Posted: 2026-02-19 Source: UC Irvine News News Type: Features & Briefs share With federal funding, Mihaela Balu, UC Irvine associate professor of dermatology and biomedical engineering, and her team have invented a laser-equipped device that looks beneath the skin surface for early signs of melanoma – without biopsy – and can monitor the effectiveness of treatments. Steve Zylius / UC Irvine When Mihaela Balu was interviewing for a postdoctoral position nearly two decades ago, she would describe the kind of training she was looking for, and nearly everyone she talked to nationwide said, “You should go to Beckman Laser Institute & Medical Clinic.” Fortunately for UC Irvine, she did. Now an associate professor of dermatology and biomedical engineering, Balu and her team have developed a device that uses a low-power infrared laser to scan beneath the skin surface at a cellular level. The goal is to better detect early signs of melanoma – without biopsy – and to monitor the effectiveness of skin treatments. Balu has received several National Institutes of Health grants as well as funding from the Department of Defense: “They have soldiers in the field exposed to sun,” she notes. With the device now in clinical trials, Balu says that none of this could have happened without federal support. “Those grants give us the ability to attract the best talent, and it’s important to have talented, passionate, dedicated people driving the research,” she says. The competition for top-quality researchers is fierce, as private industry can offer better compensation. “I’m very fortunate to work with an exceptional team,” Balu says. “Within our larger group, we have a core set of people whose expertise is essential to our long-term success. It’s important to retain that core. We don’t want to hire talented people for a few years, lose funding and be forced to rebuild. Our goal is to maintain a stable foundation.” Balu, a physicist and engineer by training, leads a team that includes two other physicists, a biologist, a chemist and a biomedical engineer. This broad range of skills is powerful in a setting where research shares the clinical space, something she notes is extremely rare. “It allows us to track the performance of the devices we build, evaluate their limitations and get them back to the lab for design improvements,” she says. The device – known as the fast, large-area, multiphoton exoscope – is wheeled into a clinical research room and connected to a small metal ring taped to a patient’s skin to ensure stability. A laser is used to excite molecules, allowing the FLAME to form detailed images of the cells and fibers underneath. Read the entire feature article, with video, in UC Irvine News. Media Contacts Matt Miller Director mrmille2@uci.edu Michelle Heath Manager mstrombe@hs.uci.edu Shani Murray Senior Science Writer shanim@hs.uci.edu Communications & PR Office Associated Links Feature article in UC Irvine News Video on "A Laser Focus on Melanoma - UC Irvine" Related Faculty/Staff Mihaela Balu, PhD Associate Professor