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Return to Virginia Business - March 2005

News & Features


Turning research into products
Technology transfer provides boost to business, revenue for universities

Editor’s note: This is the second in a two-part series on the effects of university research on economic development.
Part 1: Boosting university research expected to pay off in economic development, Feb. 2005 issue

by Chris Dovi
Virginia Business

March 2005

READER RESOURCES
Related story: Publisher's Financial Roundtable
Web Pointers: For more information
Virginia Commonwealth
University Office of Technology Transfer
University of Virginia Patent
Foundation
Virginia Tech Intellectual
Properties Inc.

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Feedback: Comment on this story

Dr. John Herr is certain that SpermCheck Fertility will be a godsend for countless couples struggling to have children. The home fertility test Herr spent more than 15 years developing will confirm or eliminate a husband’s sperm count as reason for his wife’s difficulty in becoming pregnant.

The test, which resembles a common home pregnancy test, could be available over-the-counter as early as this fall. It works by determining high or low sperm counts using a biomarker discovered by Herr nearly 26 years ago that is unique to sperm cells. A biomarker is a distinctive characteristic that allows a cell of a particular origin or type to be identified or isolated. “The product addresses a very large market,” says Herr, who is CEO with ContraVac, the Charlottesville-based biotech startup he helped found. “Forty percent of infertility is due to the male, and this will assign the responsibility early in the process. This is really a woman’s health-care product.”

The birth of his company owes greatly to the efforts of the University of Virginia Patent Foundation. “The U.Va. Patent Foundation has taken a very positive attitude,” says Herr, who is also director of the Center for Research in Contraceptive and Reproductive Health at the university. He says that the foundation was instrumental in pursuing the patents on the biomarker.

The work of the Patent Foundation benefits more than just the inventors. University professors’ discoveries are the intellectual property of their universities. U.Va.’s foundation — as with similar foundations at Virginia’s other research universities — is quickly becoming an important revenue stream for the school. Patents that are licensed provide potential profit for researchers and the university.

Without those patents, Herr’s company “probably wouldn’t be a viable business because there would be too much competition.” Having those patents allowed ContraVac to secure angel funds; money from high-risk investors that is often integral to the early financing of high-cost — and potentially high-payoff — technology-based startup companies.

This summer, ContraVac expects to receive FDA approval for three over-the-counter versions of the first-of-its-kind test. The most basic consumer version, aimed at couples trying by themselves to eliminate potential fertility issues before resorting to expensive medical testing, likely will retail for about $25.

After years in the lab, and nearly as many years courting investors and trying to convince others of the viability of his product, Herr is tantalizingly close to realizing a dream that has become common among university researchers — and increasingly vital to the universities that fund them — market success.

Herr’s situation — even if the final happy ending remains a future goal — warms the heart of Robert S. MacWright, executive director of the U.Va. Patent Foundation. “It is not unusual today for a university professor to believe that they are the ones who understand the technology the best, and they want to create a company to bring the product to market,” MacWright says.

In fiscal 2002, 569 new products entered the marketplace that relied on university patented research. Royalties to universities — in Virginia and other states — in 2002 were more than $1 billion, according to MacWright. “They’re significant numbers.”

And while the majority of those licensed patents come from universities outside of Virginia — California, North Carolina and other states with more fully developed research university funding — the commonwealth’s piece of the pie is growing, according to MacWright.

His office last year (ending in June 2004) handled 151 invention disclosures and completed 55 license option agreements with companies.
Virginia Tech boasts similar numbers, with more than 130 disclosures and 34 licenses in 2003, according to one presentation given by university representatives.

MacWright credits federal legislation, specifically the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980, as helping transform technology transfer at research universities from a cottage industry to a billion-dollar opportunity. The legislation streamlined the process of tech transfer, he says.

Before Bayh-Dole, government-sponsored research at universities belonged to the government. That research was published in a book, MacWright says, that was “about as enjoyable to read as the NYC phone book,” and was often simply forgotten by U.S. companies that could have benefited.

As a result there weren’t a lot of university-developed inventions reaching the marketplace — at least not many that provided much direct economic benefit to the institutions or states where they were developed. “Japan was reading the book,” says MacWright. “They were reading scientific literature and developing products and selling them back to America.”

Bayh-Dole has served to correct a lot of this hemorrhaging of technology. “It’s been touted as one of the most successful pieces of legislation in American history because of its impact,” MacWright says. “In recent years many universities have begun to recognize the value technology transfer can have on local economic development.”

But technology transfer doesn’t happen without technology, says Peter Blake, Virginia’s deputy secretary of education. And there is no technology without investment and commitment by localities and by the state to ensuring that state schools have the dollars they need to attract researchers likely to develop marketable ideas. “You put smart, innovative people together and things happen,” he says.

Blake has been at the forefront of a state effort to improve funding to state universities. The goal, he explains, is to make Virginia and its research universities the go-to place for emerging technology.
University research, he says, has long been identified as an economic development issue, but only now is it getting the attention it deserves through greater funding and through better planning.

At the Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center, jobs can already be counted that are the result of technology investment and its transfer to industry uses. With 121 business tenants and more than 1,800 employees, the center expects to gain new tenants at a rate of 20 a year and a private company failure rate of less than 3 percent yearly.
The center, says Director Joe Meredith, was a direct response to “pressure from the governor’s office. They wanted to know, ‘What are you doing for economic development?’”

The center has been a resounding success, adds Meredith, pointing to its business and job creation record. Better still, the center is for-profit and self sustaining.

“One of our objectives is obviously to be financially successful,” he says. “The other objective is to increase the amount of research at Tech, increase the number of startups coming out of Tech and support regional development.”

Other local economies also are benefiting from new jobs created by the sort of technology research the governor has in mind, says Mark Licata, an associate professor at Virginia Commonwealth University’s School of Engineering. He is also president of Bio-Track, a startup company based at VCU’s Virginia Biotechnology Research Park.

He calls his teaching “more of a hobby” that he uses to benefit his collaboration with others in the academic community where he does his research. That research partnership led to Licata’s creation of a one-handed tourniquet — one that can be applied with one hand — for use by soldiers in remote battlefields.

The invention, created using feedback from U.S. Special Forces personnel, allows wounded soldiers to improve their own chances of survival by slowing blood loss from arm and leg wounds. Such wounds are responsible for an estimated 10 percent of battlefield deaths.

“I like working with VCU — they’re very open and willing to talk potential collaboration,” Licata says, citing his partner, Dr. Kevin Ward, a VCU School of Medicine professor who assisted in his tourniquet research. “VCU recognizes that there’s more benefit to the citizens of Virginia if [a VCU-owned patent] gets licensed by a local company rather than by a company that’s located in Timbukthree.”

Licata calls that recognition “just common sense” because “it’s a better deal for the state. … You create jobs in the state — which is what you really want to do. You have to be careful about licensing your technology to companies in other states because you just get the cash and not the job growth.”

Technology research parks like the one Licata calls home are a tool common at many research universities.

Old Dominion University, for example, is building a four-story 60,000-square-foot research building, the initial structure of a three-building research park. Half of the building’s space will be used by ODU, while the remaining space will be leased to companies that want to collaborate on research projects at the university or hire ODU graduates. The consulting firm Kaufman and Canoles projects that, once the resarch park is completed, it will directly or indirectly help create more than 1,000 jobs and add $25 million to the local economy.

Many research parks are operated using a business incubator model that encourages new companies to grow and then pushes them out of the nest to succeed on their own. Others, like Tech’s Corporate Research Park, are designed to be permanent homes to the businesses they foster.
Whether incubator or permanent home, these centers provide startup companies with business essentials that might otherwise not be among the talents of a typical university research scientist.

Knowing the importance of a business plan, an early supply of cash and a mentoring relationship with successful businesspeople aren’t necessarily things that come instinctively to college professors, says Jim Flowers, director of Virginia Tech’s KnowledgeWorks program. His program’s 45,000-square-foot facility opened this month. “There’s nothing in business that’s rocket science,” Flowers says, noting that the expertise of many researchers is science, not business.

Robert Porter, program development manager at Virginia Tech, notes that Tech’s incubator efforts are broad and varied. They include Tech’s involvement in the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research in Danville, an effort to position that region as a desirable location for companies spawned by university research.

Smaller endeavors are equally important, says Bio-Track’s Licata. He believes that even the creation of a few jobs through technology transfer is a step in the right direction. “We’re not looking for a home run, what we’re looking for is a lot of base hits,” says Licata, who envisions a day when Richmond’s cigarette manufacturing infrastructure might be used to make Virginia a powerhouse in the manufacture of medical devices.

Meanwhile, his much smaller-scale tourniquet idea is likely to be a pretty solid base hit, since he has been careful to partner with a local firm to manufacture his product. “This particular invention, if we create five jobs that would be great – 10 would be better,” Licata says. “You’ve got to start small.”

Return to Virginia Business - March 2005


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