| Literature DB >> 35875190 |
Berna Uygur1, Steven Ferguson2, Michael Pollack1.
Abstract
The National Institutes of Health (NIH), and especially its largest and oldest institute, the National Cancer Institute (NCI), have long been among the best - but perhaps not the most well-known supporters - for the life sciences and pharmaceutical industries, providing non-dilutive funding, scientific guidance, education for potential future employees, and importantly, collaboration opportunities including clinical trials and technology licensing partnerships. In this study, various databases were used, including the NCI Technology Transfer Center (TTC) internal agreement database, NIH technology licensing database, Global Data, Pitchbook, and NIH RePORTER, to explore and analyze collaborations and licensing partnerships between NCI TTC and life science and pharmaceutical companies. For early-stage companies receiving funding or taking part in collaborations and licensing, there is a significant relationship between these NIH agreements and successful financial exits. NCI support not only reaches these early-stage firms but also extends to the Top 20 pharmaceutical companies. These two findings highlight the importance of NCI collaborations for both early-stage and established life science and pharmaceutical companies.Entities:
Keywords: Collaboration; National Cancer Institute; clinical drug; drug development; technology transfer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35875190 PMCID: PMC9302569 DOI: 10.5912/jcb1020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Commer Biotechnol ISSN: 1462-8732