This free 1:1 virtual session is an opportunity to discuss your company with experts in diagnostics, therapeutics, digital health and medical devices.
If you’re a growth-stage biohealth company looking for unbiased advice on your pitch deck, commercialization strategy, evidence development or entrepreneurial challenges, our EIRs can help.
To request a feedback session, please send a non-confidential pitch deck, and a short description of the input you’re seeking from the EIRs, to Sarah Miller smiller@biohealthinnovation.org
The requested information should be received by our office at least 2 weeks in advance, so that we can schedule the appropriate experts. Thank you!
Expedited Bill 31-22 will alter eligibility requirements of the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer Matching Grant Program
ROCKVILLE, Md., Nov. 29, 2022—Today the Montgomery County Council unanimously passed legislation that will fuel economic development by providing the County Executive with greater flexibility regarding the administration of the County's program to match federal Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer grants. The legislation is sponsored by Planning, Housing and Economic Development (PHED) Committee Chair Hans Riemer and Councilmembers Will Jawando and Andrew Friedson, who sit on the PHED Committee.
Join Venable’s Ari J. Markenson, Ilisa Halpern Paul, and Joshua Raymond in a discussion of the implications for national healthcare and life sciences policy following the results of the midterm congressional election. Ari will moderate the discussion with Ilisa and Joshua as they provide insights into and analysis of what investors, lenders, providers, manufacturers, and stakeholders might expect in the next 18 to 24 months with respect to federal health policy. The discussion will cover a wide range of topics, such as the anticipated House and Senate policy agendas, regulatory priorities for the Biden-Harris administration, and potential areas of bipartisan agreement. There will be time for questions from the audience following the panel.
After creating the satellite-radio industry and developing a drug for her daughter's serious disease, Martine Rothblatt is leading her biotech to test another boundary of what's possible.
The 68-year-old entrepreneur's newest mission is to create an endless supply of organs. Her company, the $12 billion Maryland-based biotech United Therapeutics, has already put gene-edited pig hearts, lungs, and kidneys into humans in clinical studies. Rothblatt now hopes to start making organs with 3D printing to solve the organ-supply crisis, with over 100,000 Americans on waiting lists for transplants.
Image: Martine Rothblatt, CEO of United Therapeutics, previously founded the satellite-radio pioneer SiriusXM. Elijah Nouvelage/REUTERS
Illumina Accelerator alum Polaris Genomics is investigating how genomics can help diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health issues. The Maryland-based company is developing genomic panels that could more objectively screen people for PTSD and help them get the care they need.
“Our mission is to make these invisible wounds visible using the power of genomics,” says Polaris Co-Founder and CEO Charles Cathlin. “We believe genomics is a driving force to connect mental illness to its biological underpinnings. By doing that, we can decrease the stigma, suffering, silence, and suicide.”
Image: Polaris Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Naclerio and Polaris Co-Founder and CEO Charles Cathlin | Photo: Noah Willman
SANTA MONICA, Calif. & AMSTERDAM–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Neogene Therapeutics, Inc. (Neogene), a global clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering the discovery, development and manufacturing of next-generation T-cell receptor therapies (TCR-Ts), today announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by AstraZeneca.
With a shared goal of bringing cell therapies to patients with solid tumors, Neogene’s expertise in TCR-T discovery, development and manufacturing will strengthen AstraZeneca’s ambition to transform outcomes for patients.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Vanda Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Vanda) (Nasdaq: VNDA) today reported results in a Phase II clinical study of VQW-765, a novel small molecule alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (α7-nAChR) partial agonist, in the treatment of acute performance anxiety in social situations, such as public speaking.
In clinical study VP-VQW-765-2201 (Study 2201), 230 volunteers with prior history of performance anxiety were randomized to receive a single dose of VQW-765 or placebo and were challenged with the standardized Trier Social Stress Test (TSST). The TSST creates an acute stress by requiring participants to make an interview-style presentation in front of a panel who provides no feedback or encouragement. Participants who received VQW-765 showed numerically lower stress levels compared to those who received placebo.
Maryland Manufacturing Extension Partnership joins City/County consortium to expand third Biotech Bootcamp in Frederick
FREDERICK, MD. (PRWEB) DECEMBER 01, 2022
Following the completion of two successful sessions, Frederick Community College, Frederick County Workforce Services, The City of Frederick Department of Economic Development, and the Frederick County Office of Economic Development are pleased to announce the next "Biotech Bootcamp" will be held in Frederick in January 2023. Maryland Manufacturing Extension Partnership (Maryland MEP) has joined the Frederick consortium to provide additional programming support aimed at expanding the program’s footprint in the future.
A year marked mostly by biopharma mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in the hundreds of millions of dollars could end with a blockbuster, depending how far Horizon Therapeutics (HZNP) gets, and how quickly its talks with a trio of potential suitors, all of them being corporate giants.
Horizon shares jumped 27% from $78.76 to $100.29 on Wednesday, the first trading day after the company announced that it was in M&A talks with Amgen (AMGN), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)’s Janssen Global Services, and Sanofi (SAN, SNY), confirming a report in The Wall Street Journal.
Cancer continues to be a leading cause of mortality worldwide, accounting for nearly 10 million deaths in 2020. Alongside growing incidence rates each year, knowledge of molecular and tumor biology has also increased and notably affected cancer treatment paradigms. Until recently, cancer therapeutics focused on four main types of treatment: surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and targeted therapy. However, over the past ten years, immunotherapy has emerged as a novel and revolutionary approach to cancer treatment.
You’ve Created the Technology. Put It to Work with I-Corps.
I-Corps at NIH is an entrepreneurship training program specifically designed for companies that received Small Business Innovation Research or Small Business Technology Transfer funding from NIH and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). During this 8-week, hands-on program, you’ll learn how to focus your business plan and get the tools to bring your treatment to the patients who need it most.
I-Corps Program Benefits
Get funding up to $55,000 to cover program costs.
Receive training from biotech sector experts.
Expand your professional network.
Build the confidence and skills to create a comprehensive business model.
Gain years of entrepreneurial skills in only weeks.
Questions about the program should be directed to the agency contact at your awarding NIH/CDC institute or to one of the contacts in the table below.
There is a new revolution of technology emerging based on the understanding of sub-atomic physics: quantum. This revolution leverages advanced scientific understanding and engineering capabilities at the sub-atomic level to create new solutions across critical domains such as computing, sensing, cryptography, materials, and communications. Through particle-level precision controls, technologies may provide uniquely powerful, fast, and precise capabilities that will benefit society.
University of Maryland College Park (UMCP) graduates are some of the most sought-after graduates in the country – Maryland is the No. 1 state for technology and science workforce and second in graduate or professional degree attainment. The state is also the second-largest recipient of federal funding in Maryland and 10th in the nation among public universities, according to Ken Porter, director of UM Ventures for UMCP.
UMCP is one of five universities working in partnership with TEDCO as part of our Maryland Innovation Initiative (MII), established in 2012 as a technology transfer program with the goal to grow and accelerate promising technologies through venture creation. Porter is a member of the MII board.
3D Model of ATP Synthase – molecular motor (enzyme) that powers cells, generating chemical energy in the form of ATP molecules.
The 1997 Nobel prize in Chemistry was awarded to John Walker and Paul Boyer for solving the structure and mechanism of the enzyme ATP synthase which is involved in the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). ATP is a molecule that provides energy to drive many processes in living cells.
Over the past four fiscal years, there have been 1,977 initial public offerings (IPOs) completed by companies headquartered in the U.S., according to PitchBook, yielding more than $549 billion in capital invested. These companies are located in 45 states, D.C., and Puerto Rico. Almost 20% of those companies are no longer publicly held, having been returned to private ownership, been acquired, merged or gone out of business.
Across the four years, data shows a spike of IPO size and count in 2021, with a total IPO count of 956 and total IPO size of $315.7 billion for the year.