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Irish start-up BioPixS secures EU funding to develop innovative Covid-19 response

Posted on: 12 Aug 2020

Irish start-up BioPixS secures EU funding to develop innovative Covid-19 response

Tyndall is pleased to announce that spin-out company BioPixS and their consortium partners are among only 23 projects selected for European Commission emergency funding related to Covid-19. Targeting innovative and rapid health-related responses to the pandemic, researchers across Europe will receive a total of €128M in European Commission funding as part of the EU fight against Covid-19. Irish SME BioPixS, which launched from the SFI-funded IPIC, is part of the selected VASCOVID consortium project. VASCOVID will develop a portable, non-invasive monitoring platform for the assessment of microvascular health in Covid-19 patients requiring mechanical ventilation in the intensive care setting.

L-R: Stefan Andersson-Engels, Head of BioPhotonics, IPIC; BioPixS CEO Sanathana Konugolu Venkata Sekar; David McGovern, Senior Business Development Manager, IPIC at Tyndall. 

Combining two technologies based on state-of-the-art bio-photonics and artificial intelligence, namely time-resolved near-infrared spectroscopy and diffuse correlation spectroscopy, it will enable real-time evaluation of cardiopulmonary interactions. This will provide clinical information of heart-lung interactions in critically ill patients. VASCOVID will support ventilatory strategies with a specific target to reduce extubation failure during the process of weaning patients from mechanical ventilation.

The project is led by the Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (ICFO), and BioPixS will provide novel phantoms to fast track instrument development. This will enable a standardized approach to characterisation/verification, and also provide quality control during day to day operations of the VASCOVID device. In announcing their participation, BioPixS CEO Sanathana Konugolu Venkata Sekar said:

It is a proud moment for us to be in position to utilise our best in class phantoms to support the development and deployment of an instrument with the potential to aid Intensive Care Units across the globe in their care of Covid-19 patients.

Commenting on the announcement Prof Paul Townsend, IPIC Director, said

This is a great example of how world leading Irish research, and it’s advancement to market through start-up companies, is helping to address the Covid-19 pandemic.