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Author: ITM_admin

Ministerial announcement provides funding boost

Following the Secretary of State for Health the Rt. Hon. Jeremy Hunt’s announcement of £14.25m funding to support 11 NIHR medtech and in vitro diagnostic cooperatives nationally, we are delighted to announce that University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust (UHB) has been awarded funding to establish the NIHR Trauma Management MedTech Cooperative (MTC) here at the ITM.

The cooperatives will build expertise and capacity in the NHS to develop new medical technologies and provide evidence on commercially supplied in vitro diagnostic (IVD) tests. Funding will be provided over five years for leading NHS organisations to act as centres of expertise, bringing together patients, clinicians, researchers, commissioners and industry. The NIHR Trauma MTC at UHB will have a specific focus on medical devices and technology in the trauma management field, led by Dr Tom Clutton-Brock.

UHB is a UK major trauma centre, home to the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, and a regional burns centre. This award will allow the Trust to build on five successful years of working with the public, clinicians, academics and industry to drive innovation in the medtech sector, as part of the NIHR Healthcare Technology Cooperatives initiative.

University Hospitals Birmingham is also a part of Birmingham Health Partners (BHP), a strategic alliance between UHB, the University of Birmingham and Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust. BHP focuses on the identification, adoption and spread of innovation and best practice through the alignment of healthcare delivery, research and training. It aims to improve healthcare, contribute to the local economy through job creation and inward investment into the biomedical sector, and increase public engagement and education about biomedicine and clinical research.

Dr Louise Wood, Director of Science, Research and Evidence at the Department of Health said: “The funding received by the eleven NIHR medtech and in vitro diagnostic cooperatives will make a real difference to patients’ lives and provide a focal point for the medtech and in vitro diagnostic industries to develop new technologies and generate the evidence needed by the NHS to support the uptake of new tests.”

The commencement of the NIHR Trauma MTC will coincide with the launch of the Medical Devices Testing and Evaluation Centre (MD-TEC) in Birmingham in January 2018, also at the ITM, which will offer a unique opportunity to facilitate evaluation of products for industry in a ‘real-life’ environment, involving appropriate clinical and technical staff.

You can read the NIHR’s announcement and find further details of the new NIHR medtech and in vitro diagnostic cooperatives on the NIHR website.

£3.5 million European funding secured to benefit West Midlands life sciences SMEs

University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust has been awarded £3.5m after successfully bidding for European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) monies to establish a Medical Devices Testing and Evaluation Centre (MD-TEC) in partnership with the University of Birmingham and Aston University.

The grant will be match-funded, including £2.5m capital from University of Birmingham, meaning £7m will be invested in accelerating the translation of novel innovations in the laboratory through to the clinic and commercial exploitation.

It will support the development of existing markets and stimulate new ones for small and medium sized Life Sciences businesses, enabling them to bring products to market quickly, at less cost with reduced risk.

MD-TEC will be based at the Institute of Translational Medicine (ITM), a facility delivered by Birmingham Health Partners (BHP) and located at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, which is run by UHB.

It goes live this month (January 2017) with completion of the refurbishment by August 2017. Alongside the key delivery partners Birmingham City University, Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and the West Midlands Academic Health Science Network will also be supporting partners.

Liam Grover, Professor in Biomaterials Science at the University of Birmingham, will lead biomaterials development and Dr Tom Clutton-Brock, Clinical Director, NIHR Trauma Management Healthcare Technology Cooperative and Deputy Director of the ITM, will lead medical device usability and safety testing.

Prof Grover said: “MD-TEC will help develop a life sciences cluster around the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham and University of Birmingham campus and, more broadly, an innovation eco-system across the Greater Birmingham & Solihull Local Enterprise Partnership (GBS LEP) area.

“It will remove a regulatory blockage to the development of the local life science economy by providing a set of facilities that we have identified to be absent in the region.”

Dr Clutton-Brock said: “It is envisaged that up to 135 small and medium sized enterprises could benefit from the refurbished facilities in the ITM and expertise for ISO-accredited characterisation of devices in terms of safety and usability between May 2017 and March 2020.

“The project will build on the vision of the ITM to accelerate the translation of novel innovations in the laboratory and in simulated clinical environments through to the clinic and commercial exploitation.”

For further details email MDTEC@uhb.nhs.uk.

Institute of Translational Medicine officially opened

The Institute of Translational Medicine (ITM) was officially opened on Tuesday October 4 by John Clancy, Leader of Birmingham City Council.

Funded through the Birmingham City Deal and delivered by Birmingham Health Partners, the facility brings together clinical expertise, pioneering science, and academic excellence to accelerate the delivery of precision healthcare.

It aims to speed up the rate at which research can improve patient treatments and outcomes by using a multi-disciplinary, highly-collaborative approach that will include all components of the bench-to-bedside pathway.

Professor Subrata Ghosh, ITM Director said: “This world-class clinical research facility has been created out of a vision to translate science to relieve human suffering.

“It will facilitate communication and collaboration between different disciplines and expertise to solve problems and break down barriers while facilitating the rapid and cost-effective assessment of new drugs, medical devices and diagnostics.”

The ITM will incorporate research projects at the co-located Centre for Rare Diseases which runs more than 40 clinics for people from all over the UK.

BHP is a collaboration between the University of Birmingham, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust (UHB), Birmingham Children’s Hospital and Birmingham Women’s Hospital.

The Rt Hon Jacqui Smith, Chair of UHB, said: “Here in Birmingham we recognised some time ago that a more joined-up approach would be vital in capturing our research capacity and excellence and turning it into improved front line treatments and devices for patients.

“Personalised medicine will become increasingly important. Bespoke care plans rather than a one-fits-all approach will be necessary.”

Professor Sir David Eastwood, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham added: “Accelerating patient access to new innovative medicines and technologies is at the heart of what we do in the Birmingham life sciences engine.

“We improve patient care and well-being by facilitating discoveries made in the laboratory and translating them into clinical practice as quickly as possible.

“Birmingham can do this at a pace, scale and efficiency which is unrivalled in the UK.

“Globally, we are one of the few cities equipped to deliver the full circle of translational medicine.”