The Future is Bright For Life Sciences in State of Illinois
In 2006,
BIO2006 and New Biotech Initiatives in
The conference also had the goal of sparking a number of initiatives to put
Both city and state leaders recognize that the life sciences sector – with an aging population, innumerable unmet needs in medicine and increasing globalization of pharmaceuticals and medical technology – represents a strong part of commerce for the future. That means lots of meaningful and high-paying jobs.
Rising Importance of Convergent Medical Technologies (CMT)
The 2006 column also focused on one particular aspect of BIO 2006: the rising importance of convergent or combination medical technologies. By definition, these are technologies that straddle both the device and drug worlds and also incorporate aspects of IT and nanotechnology. In the diagram below, areas of overlap represent potential convergent medical technology applications. The “device” sector is indicated here as “surgical tech:”

While the paradigm for convergent medical technologies (CMT) has been the drug-eluting stent (DES), other areas have also seen recent applications such as implantable insulin delivery pumps and programmable intracardiac defibrillators. However, it is not so easy to develop CMT as there are significant cultural and regulatory differences between the biopharma and device sectors. Some of these differences are highlighted in the chart below:

Midwest Poised to Leverage CMT
So what does this have to do with the
iBIO PROPEL project: Developing Entrepreneurship
Just one example of the many initiatives that have been spawned from BIO 2006 is the recently unveiled iBIO PROPEL project. iBIO is the Illinois Biotechnology Industry Organization. Its mission is to strengthen the leadership position of
While it wasn’t as raucous as the seventh-inning stretch at Wrigley Field, you could sense the excitement and enthusiasm in the air. Ultimately it is people and the commitment of people that will be critical to moving the PROPEL and innumerable other such initiatives forward. I had a chance to speak with iBIO President David Miller after the event. We both agreed that the outlook for life sciences in
“Prospects are strong for the entire state because of the range of applications under development here,” Miller said. “What’s new – and the reason I’m so confident – is that we have engineered a phenomenal level of cooperation among the three primary sectors: public, private and education/ research.”
Kudos to Miller and to Mayor Daley, Jack Lavin and many others who have helped to bring this spirit of collaboration to reality. In fact, that speaks directly to why
The mega BIO conference (dare we say “Biopalooza”?) is scheduled to return to
Ogan Gurel, MD MPhil
gurel@aesisgroup.com
http://blog.aesisgroup.com/

Convergent Medical Technology Innovation Illinois Chicago Partnerships Aesis Research Group Ogan Gurel MD



Comments