Oregon Bio Names Winning Bioscience Companies and Life Science Researchers
Two emerging bio companies and two rising-star researchers were chosen at Oregon Bio 2019: Innovating and Scaling for our Region’s Growth conference in Portland.
PORTLAND, Ore.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–#annualconference–Industry expert judges and attendees picked the four winners of the Oregon Bioscience Association’s 2019 Research Fast Pitch and Company Pitch Fest competition. Entrants competed for more than $15,000 worth of cash and prizes, designed to further their study and commercialization potential. The presentations and voting happened at the Oct. 29 Oregon Bio 2019: Innovating and Scaling for our Region’s Growth conference.
“The winners represent the best of our industry, which is dedicated to discovery of innovative healing technologies, addressing unmet medical needs and driving economic development to spur commercialization,” said Oregon Bio’s Executive Director Liisa Bozinovic. “We want to do all we can to encourage innovations and cures.”
Competing in the Company Pitch Fest were eight competitively selected, regional bioscience companies, representing the device, diagnostic, digital health and therapeutics sectors. One company won the judges award and another company took home the People’s Choice designation.
The winner was Sparrow Pharmaceuticals and its President, David Katz, Ph.D. Dr. Katz presented Sparrow’s emerging success with its novel products that combine an HSD-1 inhibitor with a corticosteroid, stating it will become the first effective, safe, convenient, and cost-effective treatments for patients with autoimmune and other diseases to eliminate and reduce side effects of long-term steroid use.
Katz noted, “[We] appreciate the recognition this award provides for the potential impact of our efforts to deliver next generation steroid products with a substantially improved safety.”
For its win, Sparrow receives $5,000 cash, BioPro course(s) admission and $4,000 of value in legal counsel.
Judges noted Sparrow has a “clear plan for clinical development and in-licensing. Its technology has a distinct advantage in having been through human safety trials and having human proof of concept for its small molecule enzyme inhibitors designed to reduce side effects of important steroid drugs. Sparrow has a strong patent position.” Sparrow is headquartered in Portland, Oregon.
The winning research project was presented by Xinyue “Lucy” Lu, a graduate student researcher at Clemson University, who is developing a novel bio-adhesive mesh system for hernias. Lu proposes this new point-of-care technology to combine hydrogel adhesive and polymer surface modification, which will be part of a $3 billion industry. Lu, who resides in Beaverton, receives $1,000 in cash, BioPro course(s), free admission to an upcoming Oregon Bio event and legal counsel.
Lu competed against seven other researchers, including Ph.D. candidates. The judges noted Lu’s presentation showed her proposal had the “most promise in being a platform technology/research project. She also focused on her research solution. Lucy had the right balance of addressing the problem, her solution, next steps, and potential impact.”
To see the competing researchers and companies, view the Event Guide at https://www.oregonbio.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Oregon-Bio-2019-Event-Guide.pdf.
The audience voted to name a People’s Choice winners in both categories. The People’s Choice in the Company Pitch Fest Category was Curadite. Jody McNannay, co-founder of Curadite, a startup working to deploy a novel medication management platform, said, “Winning the People’s Choice Award confirms the broad impact medication adherence has on so many people. Given the breadth of the audience at Oregon Bio 2019—from life science leaders and entrepreneurs to students and researchers—this win was truly inspiring for the entire Curadite team.”
For the researchers, the People’s Choice was Lael Wentland, a graduate student at Oregon State University, who presented a home-use testing diagnostic to determine levels of Phenylketonuria, an indicator in diabetes monitoring.
The Oregon Bio 2019: Innovating and Scaling for our Region’s Growth event partners and sponsors included OTRADI/Oregon Bioscience Incubator, Genentech, Biogen, BIO, Nikon, Skanska, VWR, MacDonald-Miller, PhRMA and Miller Nash Graham & Dunn.
About Oregon Bio
The Oregon Bioscience Association seeks to create opportunity through advocacy, cultivation, education and group purchasing discounts for its members and the sector. Oregon Bio promotes the growth and quality of the bioscience industry in the region and continually seeks ways to support sustainability, acceleration and growth in the life science, bioscience, biotechnology and device manufacturing industries. Oregon Bio, a nonprofit membership association, affiliates with the Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO), and the Advanced Medical Technology Association.
The region’s most current bioscience economic impact study showed in 2017 Oregon’s growing bio footprint reached $10.7 billion, creating 47,238 jobs for $1.5 billion in wages across 820 business establishments. Between 2002-2017, total bioscience employment in Oregon jumped 72 percent among the five industry subsectors. Health-related R&D at Oregon hospitals and universities generated $669 million in economic activity in 2017. In 2015, federal research funding to Oregon institutions totaled more than $363 million. Venture capital investments in Oregon’s bioscience-related companies have increased in recent years and between 2014 to 2017, totaled $76.5 million.
Also growing is Oregon’s share of NIH funding. A 2018 report released by BIO shows Oregon attracted 1,274 bioscience and related patents. The study also found Oregon is emerging in several bioscience areas, with job growth in four of the five major subsectors from 2007 to 2016.
For more information about Oregon Bioscience Association, please visit www.oregonbio.org. Connect with us on LinkedIn and Twitter.
Contacts
Dianne Danowski Smith, (503) 201-7019, @OregonBio, #oregonbio2019