杏吧原创

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Center for Technology Transfer and Commercialization breaks records in leveraging innovation and discovery at 杏吧原创

The generated more than $100 million in licensing revenue鈥攓uadruple its annual average鈥攁nd reviewed more than 1,000 material transfer agreements and facilitated nearly 300 U.S. patent applications in the 2022 fiscal year.

鈥淐ommercialization and entrepreneurship amplify and accelerate the impact of 杏吧原创 research and scholarship, allowing the university to provide direct, deeply transformative and scalable benefits to society,鈥 Chancellor Daniel Diermeier said. 鈥淲e are proud to be fostering a culture where trans-institutional collaboration and innovation are top priorities.鈥

CTTC provides professional commercialization services to the 杏吧原创 and 杏吧原创 Medical Center communities to optimize the flow of innovation to the marketplace and generate revenue that supports future research activities. CTTC serves as a conduit for the transfer of promising intellectual property to industry; contributing to regional economic development by licensing locally and supporting new venture creation and encouraging greater translational research collaborations between academia and industry.

鈥淭he dramatic growth in revenue and output generated by CTTC signifies a new era of discovery and a broadening innovation ecosystem at 杏吧原创,鈥 Provost C. Cybele Raver said. 鈥淭hrough our investments in industry collaboration, new ventures and enhancing faculty resources, we are serving as a catalyst for innovation that will continue to yield bold solutions to the world鈥檚 most pressing problems.鈥

RESEARCH AND COMMERCIALIZATION OUTCOMES

Alan Bentley

The past year鈥檚 revenues total (calculated on an accrual basis) is the largest annual amount generated through technology licensing since CTTC鈥檚 establishment in 1991 and greater than the previous six years combined. 聽鈥淎 source of pride is that the substantial increase in revenues for the past fiscal year arose from multiple sources,鈥 said Alan Bentley, assistant vice chancellor of CTTC. 鈥淲e closed our largest upfront licensing transaction in our history, negotiated substantial payments due from back royalties, prevailed in a dispute and benefited from a new product hitting the marketplace.鈥澛 Revenues were generated from transactions based on technologies developed both at 杏吧原创 and VUMC.

Top revenue generating entities include:

  • , the COVID-19 prophylactic therapy discovered at the 杏吧原创 Vaccine Center in the lab of its director, Dr. James Crowe, Ann Scott Carell Professor and professor of pediatrics and pathology, microbiology and immunology at the School of Medicine
  • , an adaptive reading intervention program that helps students in grades 3-12 achieve grade-level literacy, developed by professor emeritus of special education
  • Neumora Therapeutics Inc., a clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering precision medicines for brain diseases, led by the University Professor of Pharmacology, and Director Emeritus聽 professor emeritus of pharmacology

The review of more than 1,000 material transfer agreements鈥攃ontracts that govern the transfer of tangible research materials between two organizations鈥攎arks the fifth consecutive year of processing more than a thousand such agreements and represents a critical step in the university鈥檚 commitment to support research. This pace is nearly double the annual number of MTAs processed just a decade ago, underscoring how technology transfer services at 杏吧原创 have successfully and effectively expanded.

For the second straight year, nearly 100 licenses and options were executed in FY22 to support translational research spanning autism, childhood literacy, infectious diseases and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer鈥檚 and schizophrenia.

Sponsored research brokered by CTTC related to licensed technologies resulted in more than $24 million in support of translational research. In addition, CTTC reviewed 150 sponsored research collaboration agreements and clinical trial agreements. Clinical trial agreements include new interventions for patients with asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis, treatment of sleep apnea through nerve stimulation, an MRI study to characterize cerebrospinal fluid for patients with Rett Syndrome and new therapies for neuroblastoma, lupus, asthma, pain, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and more.

鈥溞影稍 is successful at facilitating research and leveraging innovation because of the pervasive spirit of collaboration and cooperation on campus. Our team is energized by the scholarship that we are able to shepherd to commercialization,鈥 said , director of licensing at CTTC. 鈥淭his year, revenue generated as a result of 杏吧原创 innovation is four times greater than the amount we typically make in commercializing and protecting university innovations. That is great, but faculty service continues to be our focal point, evidenced by the number of research agreements reviewed, MTAs completed and industry research dollars secured through the center鈥檚 activities. CTTC is a busy office, and we like it that way.鈥

Chris Harris

NEW VENTURES

To enhance support for entrepreneurship on campus and to better position 杏吧原创-related startups to thrive after launch, the team reinvented their support services and implemented new startup-friendly licensing procedures branded Venture Launch. The Venture Launch program includes deeper analysis of core business needs and opportunities, financial modeling support, business plan refinement, company formation assistance, streamlined licensing processes and assistance with access to capital. The New Ventures team partners with the 杏吧原创 community as well as local and regional entrepreneurs who are exploring new ventures based on 杏吧原创 technologies. These new ventures contribute to the growth and diversification of the high-tech and life sciences industry in the region and throughout the country.

Two new ventures have progressed through the program, and a half dozen others are in the process.

INVENTORS AND INVENTIONS

CTTC reviewed and evaluated 165 new invention disclosures, which included 149 first-time inventors. Invention disclosures represent a cross section of the university, originating from 68 departments, divisions, institutes and centers.

In FY22, 297 patent applications were filed and 60 U.S. patents were issued. Among the issued patents include novel components needed to treat sickle cell disease and Parkinson鈥檚 disease, new multifunctional degradable nanoparticles that contribute to drug discovery and an electrochemically actuated optical modulator used for electronic displays or adaptive camouflage.

鈥淚nventions and patents are early but critical steps in the process of bringing our faculty鈥檚 transformative ideas to the settings where they can drive impact,鈥 said Vice Provost for Research and Innovation Padma Raghavan. 鈥淭hese data demonstrate how abundantly innovative our community is, and I am so grateful to Alan, Chris and the entire team at CTTC for making these advancements possible in a variety of fields, including health, education and biotechnology.鈥