Skip to main content
All Posts By

admin

brooking-life-science-sector-report-image

Entrepreneurship and Job Creation in the U.S. Life Sciences Sector – Brookings Institution

By News Archive

brooking-life-science-sector-report-image

This brief analyzes entrepreneurship and job creation in the U.S. life sciences sector—defined as the group of industries engaged in the application of biological science and related knowledge for commercial purposes, primarily for human health care. This definition contains three major subgroups: drugs and pharmaceuticals; medical devices and equipment; and research, testing, and medical laboratories.

Building on previous research that highlights the importance of entrepreneurship and business dynamism to innovation, productivity, and net job creation, this brief analyzes how those trends apply to the life sciences sector. Overall, the life sciences sector plays an outsized role in new job creation and makes important contributions to entrepreneurship—not to mention the perhaps immeasurable benefits these firms play in enhancing and extending human life.

Read More
janssen-johnson-and-johnson-logo

New Janssen Labs Incubator Could Bring Up to 50 Companies to South SF – Xconomy

By News Archive

janssen-johnson-and-johnson-logo

Tiny biotech startups will have a new place to germinate in the San Francisco Bay Area. Healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen Labs division is opening a new 30,000 square foot incubator in the biotech-rich suburb of South San Francisco.

The flexible space, complete with common rooms, wet labs, and offices, could hold as many as 50 companies, according to Melinda Richter, a Bay Area incubator veteran tapped last year to head Janssen Labs nationwide. That would roughly double the group’s nationwide capacity, part of the international company’s aggressive reach beyond its walls to find, and fund, new science and technology. “We’re taking a big footprint,” Richter said, with half devoted to shared research equipment and services and half to space that can be customized to individual tenants.

Read More
pills-pharma-rgbstock

Frost & Sullivan: A Rise in IPOs Revive Investments for the Global Pharma and Biotech Industry – MarketWatch

By News Archive

pills-pharma-rgbstock

The heightened private equity and venture capital (PEVC) deal activity in the global healthcare industry during the recession years, 2008-2010, witnessed a decline post-2010. However, the fall in deals was not uniform among the constituent sectors, with the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and healthcare equipment sectors experiencing a much sharper decline in investor interest than the healthcare technology and provider segments. Investors started to bet on providers based with the conviction they can provide quicker and safer returns than the pharmaceutical and biotechnology space, which is ridden with regulatory challenges and patent expiries.

New analysis from Frost & Sullivan’s Private Equity and Venture Capital Investment in the Global Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology Industry reveals the total number of PEVC deals in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry decreased from 1063 in 2010 to 480 in 2013. Though the returns from the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry have been dwindling, they are better compared to the performance of other industries.

Read More
exit-sign-rgbstock

Entrepreneurs Better Off Taking Less Venture Capital, Study Shows

By News Archive

exit-sign-rgbstock

Although it seems raising as much venture capital as humanly possible is Silicon Valley’s mantra, there are reasons to be cautious when signing termsheets. Startups raising a couple of million dollars had a median exit price of more than $10 million, while the outcome for those raising double that was actually worse, a recent study shows.

The report, by San Francisco-based Exitround, a marketplace for M&A deals for small tech companies, found companies raising $2 million to $3 million were more likely to exit at a valuation over $10 million, while for startups raising $3 million to $10 million the median exit price was less.

Read More
maryland-incubator-company-of-the-year-2014-logo

Maryland Incubator of the Year Award winners unveiled – Baltimore Business Journal

By News Archive

maryland-incubator-company-of-the-year-2014-logo

Several Baltimore startups are among the winners of this year’s Maryland Incubator Company of the Year awards.

The winners were announced Tuesday evening at an awards ceremony at the American Art Visionary Museum in Baltimore. The awards are supported by the Maryland Technology Development Corp., the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development, the Maryland Business Incubation Association, M&T Bank and several other state companies.

Read More
capitol-hill-rgbstock

Senate panel OKs NIH funding boost, increase to Pell Grant – Inside Higher Ed

By News Archive

capitol-hill-rgbstock

A U.S. Senate panel on Tuesday approved a budget bill that would increase funding for the National Institutes of Health by $605 million for the fiscal year that begins October 1.

Lawmakers on the Senate’s appropriations subcommittee that oversees education, health and labor programs passed legislation that would increase the NIH’s budget to nearly $30.5 billion in the coming year. That $605 million jump represents a greater increase than the $198-million increase the Obama administration had requested.

Read More
king-rachel-glycomimetics

The big pharma gamble: GlycoMimetics’ Rachel King on signing with Pfizer – Washington Business Journal

By News Archive

king-rachel-glycomimetics

When GlycoMimetics Inc. announced a license agreement with Pfizer three years ago, the decision seemed like a no-brainer. This deal, which surrounded the sickle cell drug candidate GMI-1070, was worth up to $340 million, after all. The Gaithersburg company seemed to be in an enviable spot, while some of its Maryland counterparts struggled.

Behind the scenes, the decision to partner with big pharma didn’t come easy. CEO Rachel King, speaking this morning at a Tech Council of Maryland panel in Bethesda, recounted the calculus behind the move.

Read More
montgomery-college-logo

Seeking All Entrepreneurs!

By News Archive

September 2014 is bringing 5 NEW CLASSES to our schedule that will help you

BE THE ENTREPRENEUR THAT YOU WANT TO BE!

montgomery-college-logo

Aspiring Entrepreneurs:

1. The Intentional Entrepreneur: This one day class will help you identify your entrepreneurial skills and abilities, as well as address any concerns you may have about owning your own business. This class is a must for anyone considering starting their own business!

2. The Intentional Entrepreneur for Veterans: For veterans thinking about starting a business.

Early Stage Entrepreneurs:

3. New Venture: For the entrepreneurs in the early stages of business development.

4. New Venture for Veterans: For veterans seeking to launch an idea.

5. Tech Venture: For entrepreneurs in the tech or life sciences field seeking to start a business. (BHI EIR Todd Chappell will be one of the instructors teaching this class)

Read More
johns-hopkins-new-logo

Johns Hopkins Announces Winners of Francis S. Collins Scholar Award

By News Archive

johns-hopkins-new-logo

Two early career physician-scientists, Peter de Blank and Matthew R. Steensma, have been named inaugural winners of the Francis S. Collins Scholars Program in Neurofibromatosis Clinical and Translational Research, sponsored by the Neurofibromatosis Therapeutic Acceleration Program (NTAP) at The Johns Hopkins University. The program will create a community of expert clinician-scientists and groom them to be leaders in neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) research and clinical care. The awards will be presented at a ceremony on Tuesday, June 10, at the Whittemore House in Washington, D.C.

“It has become increasingly hard for young clinician-scientists to get the funding and dedicated time necessary to become leaders in translational science for rare diseases such as NF1,” says Jaishri Blakeley, M.D., director of the Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Neurofibromatosis Center and NTAP. “We created the Francis S. Collins Scholars Program, recognizing that a cadre of well-trained and dedicated clinician-scientists focused on NF1 is critical in order to make the scientific leaps that are possible in this modern era.”

Read More
cells-stomach-rgbstock

Personalized Medicine Meets Cancer Immunotherapy – MIT Technology Review

By News Archive

cells-stomach-rgbstock

A highly personalized medical technique is allowing patients with advanced kidney cancer to live nearly three times as long as they normally do. In an experiment involving 21 patients, around half lived more than two and half years after diagnosis with kidney cancer that had begun to spread. Five patients are alive after more than five years.

“That seems to be out of proportion with what you would expect for any commercial therapy and longer than what you would expect from patients with similar prognostic variables,” says Robert Figlin, an oncologist at Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute in Los Angeles, who is leading the study.

Read More

Search

You have successfully subscribed to the newsletter

There was an error while trying to send your request. Please try again.

BioHealth Innovation will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing.