UCLA's newly launched
on-campus technology incubator at the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI)
has opened lab space to MediSens Wireless, a startup company that develops and
manufactures personal body-monitoring systems for medical and health applications.
The incubator program was established in March to nurture early-stage research
and accelerate the commercial translation of technologies developed at UCLA.
MediSens Wireless has licensed patented technology from UCLA for wireless sensor
systems developed by Majid Sarrafzadeh, a UCLA professor of computer science
and engineering, and his team. The technology is for real-time wireless monitoring
of pressure and motion in both medical and non-medical products. The technology
will be used to develop body monitoring systems with specific applications for
use by diabetic patients with peripheral neuropathy — the loss of sensation
in the foot — and those with health issues affecting balance who are at
high risk of falls.
As part of this arrangement, MediSens Wireless has obtained an exclusive license
that will provide the University of California with a royalty on the company's
products. MediSens has rented lab space at the CNSI and will move into the incubator
space this month, with access to CNSI core lab facilities for research and development.
"We consider ourselves very fortunate to have been selected to join the
UCLA incubator program at CNSI," said Eric Collins, president and CEO of
MediSens. "The collaborative and innovative environment within the CNSI
facility is an important competitive advantage for MediSens in our mission to
bring to market products that improve millions of lives."
The UCLA on-campus Technology Incubation Program at the CNSI is an innovative
resource with a mission to help accelerate the growth of entrepreneurial startup
companies and early-stage technology research projects that originate at UCLA.
The incubator offers shared, flexible lab space dedicated to housing eight to
10 early-stage incubation projects for short periods of time.
"The incubator program is an important way for UCLA to make the fruits
of our world-class faculty's research available to the public as rapidly as
possible," said UCLA Chancellor Gene Block. "California looks to universities
like UCLA for innovative technology. It is fitting then to have these startup
companies embedded within the CNSI, whose mission is to fuel economic development
by nurturing novel technologies and transferring them from the lab to the clinical
arena and commercial market."
"We look forward to working with MediSens to move the technology to product
development," said Sarrafzadeh. "The collaborative research environment
at CNSI is invigorating, and we are delighted to have MediSens in lab space
that benefits from UCLA's great resources.
"We hope that this technology will help to reduce the large number of
injuries caused by diabetic foot ulcers and by falls each year, both in hospital
rehabilitation departments and in at-home care environments," Sarrafzadeh
said.
"We anticipate great success for MediSens as it continues to develop products
based on the convergence of computer science and engineering technology with
medical and health applications," said Leonard H. Rome, interim director
of the CNSI and senior associate dean for research at the David Geffen School
of Medicine at UCLA. "CNSI is committed to facilitating collaborations
with private industry for the rapid commercialization of new innovations, and
we are excited to welcome this startup into the incubator space as it carries
out its essential R&D."
Sarrafzadeh is also a co-director of the Wireless Health Institute (WHI) at
UCLA, which is dedicated to improving the timeliness and reach of health care
through the development and application of wireless, network-enabled technologies
integrated with current and next-generation medical enterprise computing. The
WHI is under the executive direction of Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, a UCLA visiting
professor of bioengineering and of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics
and founder and chairman of Abraxis BioScience, a founding partner of the CNSI.
Posted August 5th, 2009