Tag Archives: RESI

McDermott Will & Emery Joins RESI NYC As a Title Sponsor

14 Sep

By Natasha Eldridge, Director of RESI Conference Series, LSN

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Life Science Nation (LSN) is proud to announce that McDermott Will & Emery will serve as a title sponsor for the inaugural RESI NYC on November 15, 2017.  McDermott joins RESI NYC title sponsors WuXi AppTec, a leading global pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device open-access capability and technology platform, and Johnson and Johnson Innovation (JLABS), which provides state of the art laboratories, core research facilities, resources and connections to early stage life science innovators.

“We are proud to have been a sponsor of RESI since its inception and are particularly excited to join Wuxi AppTec and JLABS as title sponsors of the inaugural RESI in New York, a burgeoning region for life sciences,” said Byron Kalogerou, founder and chair of the firm’s Life Sciences Industry Group.  “We are continually impressed at the global convening power of RESI in its ability to connect early stage CEOs with the full spectrum of funding sources from VCs, corporate VCs, family offices and sovereign funds to venture philanthropies.  We are excited that many of our early stage clients in our Life Sciences Entrepreneurs Acceleration Program (“LEAP”) will have an opportunity to participate as well.”

“We look forward to sharing our legal insights with RESI attendees in New York in November, and at the September conference in Boston, where we will convene a panel on negotiating term sheets to be led by McDermott Will & Emery attorneys Brian Bunn and Jonathan Ursprung,” said Kalogerou.  “Our new partner, Linda Ji, will moderate the RESI panel on Chinese Investment.”

McDermott Will & Emery offers deep experience in health care and life sciences, and provides a continuum of legal services that will meet the needs of life sciences companies at every stage of development.  The firm’s Life Sciences Industry Group is comprised of 135 professionals, 60 with advanced degrees and many others with government and industry experience across 19 offices around the world.  Learn more here.

 

New at RESI Boston and RESI NYC: Academic and Tech Transfer Registration

14 Sep

By Lauren Schulkamp, Business Development Manager-RESI Conference Series, LSN

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We are excited to welcome academic scientists and tech transfer professionals to RESI for the first time.  The Redefining Early Stage Investments Conference (RESI) is now offering a special academic rate to universities, institutes, tech transfer offices, and hospitals to shine the spotlight on some of the most innovative emerging technology.  If you’d like to come to RESI to network with over 300 early stage life science investors, you can get an academic registration online now.  Academic registration includes the following:

  • All day access pass to 24 panels & workshops, RESI’s ad hoc meeting area, Exhibit Hall and Innovation Challenge, meals, and the evening Cocktail Reception
  • Full day of networking with early stage investors and pharma external innovation staff
  • Learn from life science investors and understand their investment strategies
  • Listen to current fundraising life science CEOs describe their process in developing a fundraising strategy
  • Get to know the experts as they explain the valuation process, organizing an outbound marketing campaign, negotiating term sheets, and other post-academia commercialization topics

Click here for a complete list of RESI Boston Panels & Workshops

** RESI Partnering is not included in the academic and tech transfer registration

To qualify you must:

  • Be affiliated with a non-profit certified 501(c)(3) organization. This includes universities, institutes, tech transfer offices, and hospitals
  • Register with an email address corresponding with the organization you are representing
  • Provide proof of current position – this can be done by sending proof via email to resi@lifesciencenation.com

Big Data in Drug Discovery: 5 Experts Share Their Thoughts at RESI Boston

7 Sep

By Michael Quigley, VP of Investor Research, LSN

mike-2To reduce the massive costs associated with getting a new drug approved, many startups, large pharma companies, venture funds, and others are looking to big data for a solution. These firms are researching, partnering, and investing into machine learning and artificial intelligence systems that scour through massive drug and target libraries to more quickly identify potential candidates than a team of researchers could. These technologies are leveraging all kinds of scientific and medical data including chemical, biologic, genomic and clinical datasets to best identify candidates. Companies are touting their tech promises “years” of savings and lower failure rates in research that can now be done through advanced algorithms. This may seem like quite the promise, but if you look at the number and size of deals in the space just in the past year, it’s clear that big players are listening (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6).

At RESI Boston this September 26th we are bringing together a panel of 5 experts in this space to discuss their thoughts on the challenges and opportunities that the use of Big Data in Drug Discovery currently faces. These speakers include a promising company with an emerging drug discovery technology, a massive CRO, and three venture funds, all actively working in this space. Look below to see the speakers for yourself. This is another cutting-edge session you won’t want to miss!

  • Richard Soll, Senior Vice President, Research Service Division, WuXi AppTec (moderator)
  • Gini Deshpande, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, NuMedii, Inc.
  • Millie Liu, Founding Partner, Managing Director, Procyon Ventures
  • Dylan Morris, Partner, CRV
  • Annie Hazlehurst, Founder, Faridan
  1. http://www.fiercebiotech.com/medtech/gsk-taps-baltimore-s-insilico-for-ai-based-drug-discovery
  2. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-astrazeneca-ai-berg/astrazeneca-taps-ai-for-drug-discovery-in-deal-with-berg-idUSKCN1B81G1
  3. http://www.koreabiomed.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=1254
  4. http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/wuxi-nextcode-ai-points-to-new-therapeutic-approaches-to-cardiovascular-disease-and-cancer-in-yale-nature-study-300457412.html
  5. http://www.wired.co.uk/article/benevolent-ai-london-unicorn-pharma-startup
  6. http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/numedii-inc-announces-new-partnership-to-discover-and-advance-new-treatments-for-idiopathic-pulmonary-fibrosis-300437651.html

40 Top-Tier Companies Selected to Debut at the RESI Innovation Challenge

31 Aug

By Christine A. Wu, Senior Research Analyst, LSN

chrsitineWe are pleased to announce our forty finalists to compete in the Innovation Challenge at LSN’s 2017 RESI in Boston on September 26th. From a pool of over 100 applicants, the LSN Scientific Review Committee has selected a mixture of healthcare IT, diagnostic, therapeutic, and medical device companies, a portion of which have received funding from NIH or partnered with Techstars-Cedars Sinai. The quality of these companies should not go unnoticed, as we have seen nearly 50% of Innovation Challenge finalists from previous RESI events receive funding within one year of their debut.

From a CAR-T therapy for solid tumors to a patient management telehealth platform for chronic diseases, these companies cover a diverse range of life science technologies. Coming from all over the world, the companies will be competing based on scientific merit and investment potential, pitching to RESI attendees and showcasing their innovations. Be sure to meet them and make your “investments” at the RESI Exhibition Hall on September 26th!

Diagnostic

Therapeutic

Medical Device

Healthcare IT

Diagnostic Investors Explore Their Strategies at RESI Boston

31 Aug

By Lucy Parkinson, Director of Research, LSN

Personalized medicine, NGS and new biomarkers promise a new age of tailored, targeted medical care. However, diagnostics is a notoriously challenging landscape for both entrepreneurs and investors. Through our research and outreach, LSN has found that many investors are still looking at diagnostic opportunities, with some focusing exclusively or primarily on the sector. At RESI Boston, we’ve gathered five experienced investors from both the venture and corporate worlds to explain what they’re looking for in the sector and how entrepreneurs can improve their odds of finding funding for their diagnostic business.

Moderated by Tom Miller, Managing Director, GreyBird Ventures, the panelists are:

  • Alex Dewinter, Director, GE Ventures
  • Wouter Meuleman, (Director of Investments, Illumina Ventures
  • Diana Saraceni, Founder & Managing Director, Panakes Partners
  • Adam Lessler, Vice President, Canepa Healthcare

In addition to these five experts, nearly a hundred investors attending RESI have an interest in diagnostic opportunities. If you’re looking for investment in this sector, sign up now.

Next Phase Interview: NCI Program Director Todd Haim Explains How RESI Boston Became A Showcase For NIH SBIR Grantees

24 Aug

For the third year in a row, the NIH has sponsored a group of grantees to be part of the RESI Boston Innovation Challenge. This week, Dennis Ford(DF) interviews Program Director Todd Haim(TH) to explore how this relationship benefits the NIH’s grantees, and how RESI stands out as a venue for these companies to present.

Dennis Ford
Founder & CEO, Life Science Nation; Creator of RESI Conference Series

Todd Haim
SBIR Program Director, National Cancer Institute

 

 

 

 

 

 

DF: What is the basic reason NIH is showcasing technology at RESI?

TH: The NIH is supporting the SBIR awardees to showcase their own technologies, and we do this at a variety of industry conferences. And the real goal from the NIH´s perspective is that we realize that we cannot support these companies forever; and that each individual company, in order to reach the patient and the market, will need a lot more funding than can be provided just through SBIR. They will need downstream partners and funders, and it is in our interest to help as much as we can to facilitate those partnerships.  RESI along with other early stage investor conferences provides a forum for our portfolio companies to interact with these parties. The conference hosts a unique set of investors and partners that are a good match for our Investor Initiatives program. This is the third year that we will be sending our companies to RESI.

DF: How many NIH-funded companies apply for the RESI Innovation Challenge and how many are selected as finalists?

TH: Over the past 3 years, over 150 companies have applied, and 60 of those have been featured as finalists. 20 at each conference.

DF: What are some key differences you see in the RESI conference compared to other conferences you attend?

TH: I would say two things stand out about RESI. One is the inclusion of Family Offices and groups that you don´t see at many other industry forums and showcases. The other benefit of RESI is the broad base in terms of technology types. Many of the other conferences we have participated in are really focused on one technology area, whether it be devices or therapeutics. RESI has individual tracks that represent devices or that represent therapeutics, which really allows us to present a greater variety of our companies there, and I think that broad focus is very helpful at this early stage.

DF: Is this type of showcasing of NIH-funded technology going to continue?

TH: We continually evaluate the outcomes of our companies’ participation in conferences like RESI to ensure the value of such events to our portfolio companies. We recently found out that CellSight Technologies, one of the companies that attended RESI as part of NCI SBIR’s Investor Initiatives, signed an agreement with Boehringer Ingelheim to partner on a clinical study using CellSight’s technology. We hope that participation in NCI SBIR’s Investor Initiatives will result in additional partnerships and investment for our portfolio companies. Should RESI participation continue to prove effective for NCI SBIR’s portfolio companies and our program continue to have sufficient funding for these efforts, we are likely to continue considering participation in RESI.

DF: Typically, we see for the Innovation Challenge participants up to 50% get funded or get involved in partnerships but we haven’t correlated that to SBIR participants specifically (though I know of around a half dozen off the top of my head that have fared quite well by participating in RESI). 

DF: Tell the readers some great stuff that is happening right now in the NIH funding domain:

TH: Sure. NCI and many of the other Institutes participate in both the Omnibus grant funding opportunity, which is available three times a year and the next receipt date is September 5th. About two thirds, if not more, of the funding for the NIH/SBIR program is actually through the Omnibus solicitation, which is an investigator initiated solicitation. You submit the application and you tell us what you’re working on; then it gets peer reviewed and we consider it from there. Then we have some of the Institutes within the Health and Human Services (HHS) including NCI, using a SBIR Contract Solicitation that goes out once a year to fund high-priority areas for each of those Institutes. The solicitation is now available and applications are due by October 20th. You can find the solicitation on NCI SBIR’s website (https://sbir.cancer.gov), as well as on https://sbir.nih.gov. I would definitely encourage all of the readers to look at both of those funding opportunity announcements with upcoming due dates and consider applying. We are here to work with potential applicants and help them understand how the program works, and how an application can be competitive.  So I encourage you to reach out to our office (ncisbir@mail.nih.gov) or to the SBIR Program Officers and Coordinators across the NIH before you apply. If you would like to speak to a Program Officer before you apply, that is definitely something we can arrange and provide guidance. Come and talk to us, we’re always interested in supporting new companies through the SBIR program and new projects.

Biotech Family Offices Discuss Direct Investment at RESI Boston

24 Aug

By Lucy Parkinson, Director of Research, LSN

RESI Partnering is now open, providing attendees with the opportunity to book one on one meetings with investors.  If you log in to Partnering, you will see a wide variety of investors available to reach out to, including venture capital firms, big pharma, angels – and family offices.

RESI Boston’s Biotech Family Office sesssion features family office investors from around the world who are making direct investments into early stage drug development companies.  These firms have a variety of strategies, interests and motivations.  If you’d like to know how family office investors think about early stage drugs and what kind of technology catches their eye, this is the panel for you.

Moderated by Colin Widen (CEO, Boston Innovation Capital), the panelists are:

  • Christine Bunt (Venture Partner, 20/20 HealthCare Partners)
  • Pini Orbach (Head of Pharma, Arkin Bioventures)
  • Alex Pickett (Principal, Mediqventures)
  • Jayson Rieger (SVP of Business Development & Portfolio Management, PBM Capital)

We’ve extended the RESI discounted registration until Friday, so if you want to hear from these Biotech Family Offices now is the time to get registered.