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MaRS Innovation Forms Strategic Drug-Development Partnership with NovoTek Therapeutics Inc. in China

ScarX logoMaRS Innovation (MI), The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) and NovoTek Therapeutics Inc. (NovoTek)  have announced a strategic partnership to co‐develop, and bring to the Chinese market, a novel therapeutic cream aimed at reducing scar formation post surgery.

This project was covered in The Globe and Mail on May 7, 2012.

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Xagenic Raises $10 million in Series A Financing

TORONTO (January 30, 2012) – Xagenic Inc., a start-up company created by Dr. Shana Kelley, in partnership with MaRS Innovation, today reached a significant milestone by successfully completing series A financing totaling $10 million.

The financing comes from sources from the private and public sector including CTI Life Sciences Fund L.P., Qiagen N.V. and the Ontario Capital Growth Corporation through its Emerging Technologies Fund.

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Video: Canadian International Council interviews Rafi Hofstein about commercializing Canadian technology

Dr. Raphael Hofstein, president and CEO of MaRS Innovation, spoke to the Canadian International Council about the importance of protecting intellectual property as an important component in commercializing Canadian technologies.

Here’s an excerpt:

Government could be extremely helpful if they created special funds dedicated to covering the costs of patent protection.

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York University becomes 17th Member of MaRS Innovation

MaRS Innovation to act as commercialization agent for York’s life sciences and technology discoveries, leveraging new potential for York’s existing $70 million in research initiatives

TORONTO, May 9, 2011 York University has become the latest member of MaRS Innovation, the commercialization agent for many leading Toronto-based universities, hospitals and research institutes.

Stan Shapson, vice-president Research & Innovation, York University
Stan Shapson, Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University

“York has become one of Canada’s fastest-growing centres for research and innovation,” said Stan Shapson, vice-president Research & Innovation at York University. “We typically get 10 to 20 discovery disclosures a year. Joining MaRS Innovation allows us to deliver the most competitive commercialization services to the researchers making these discoveries. We’re confident that membership in MaRS Innovation will boost that number and accelerate the commercialization of York’s most promising research.”

Earlier this year, York University launched its Innovation York office. Based in York Region, Innovation York works with other partner organizations in the Markham Convergence Centre to build upon research partnerships between York researchers and life science and technology companies based in York Region and the Greater Toronto Area. It’s also making York’s research and infrastructure more accessible to industry, government agencies and community partners.

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How VitalHub Corp. Uses iPhones® To Help Health Care

VitalHub Corp Logo: Patient information made easyTORONTO, ON (Jan. 25, 2011) —Doctors, nurses and administrators can now access electronic health applications on mobile, hand-held technology through VitalHub Corp..

The unique start-up company was spun-off from mobile health technologies developed  Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital, thanks in part to $300,000 in seed financing from MaRS Innovation that will give it a crucial head start in the fiercely competitive mobile IT health sector.

MaRS Innovation invests in the most commercially promising discoveries emerging from its member institutions, which include 16 of Toronto’s leading universities, hospitals (such as Mount Sinai) and research institutions. This funding commitment rounds out a sizeable seed round of financing for VitalHub.

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Wound Healing Technology Exclusive Rights Deal with Cardium Therapeutics

TORONTO
 (October
 14,
 2010)
 –
 Of
 the
 approximately
 300
 million
 people
 around
 the
 world
 who
 are
 diabetics,
 45
 million
 of
 them
 develop 
foot
 ulcers 
that 
bleed
 – 
and 
the 
infection
 from
 those 
ulcers
 can 
spread.

University of Toronto
University of Toronto

Working
 to
 halt
 this
 is
 Dr.
 Ping
 Lee,
 a
 professor
 at
 the
 University
 of
 Toronto’s (U of T)
 Leslie
 Dan
 Faculty
 of
 Pharmacy and
 GlaxoSmithKline chair
 in
 Pharmaceutics
 and 
Drug 
Delivery.
 He 
and 
his
 team
 have 
created 
a 
new 
sustained‐release
 form
 of
 nitric 
oxide 
(NO) 
that
 can
 not
 only
 stop 
the 
infections 
at
 wound
sites, 
but
 also
 has
 the
 potential 
to
speed
 up
 wound‐healing.

Still,
 the
 technology
 may
 have
 stayed
 on
 the
 shelf,
 even
 with
 three
 years
 worth
 of
 data
 demonstrating
 therapeutic
 relevance.
 The
 ultimate
 success
 of
 the
 technology
 is
 due
 to
 an
 effective
 collaboration
 between
 Dr.
 Lee,
 the
 Innovations
 and
 Partnerships
 Office
 (IPO)
 at
 U
 of
 T
 and
 MaRS
 Innovation (MI).
 Lee
 worked
 with
 IPO
 and
 MI to
 formulate
 a
 development
 plan
 in
 consultation
 with 
numerous 
industry
 advisors.

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