Ncardia, developer of stem cell-based solutions for drug discovery and cell therapy, has secured more than $60 million in capital through a strategic partnership with Kiniciti, a US-based investment platform.
Ncardia’s capabilities include bio-reactor-based scalable manufacturing of iPSC derived cells, assay development, disease modeling, and cell-based screening.
Alain Parthoens, Ncardia’s Chairman, said: “Kiniciti is uniquely suited to help Ncardia expand globally and to support our planned investment into GMP capabilities for our iPSC-based cell therapy platforms.”
Geoff Glass, CEO of Kiniciti, said: “We’re excited to make Ncardia the centerpiece of an ecosystem that we will build to ensure that cell therapies claim their rightful place in advancing human health. Through this partnership, Ncardia’s customers will benefit from the company’s expanded cGMP capabilities in cell therapy and more robust offerings in discovery services.”
“With this partnership, we can enhance our technology platforms with Kiniciti’s capital and deep expertise to create a strong and successful global iPSC leader,” said Stefan Braam, Ncardia co-founder and CEO. “We’ll do that on the drug discovery side by building additional human cellular models with the capability to predict whether drugs are safe and efficacious much earlier in the development process. In cell therapy, we’re going to help our customers with novel manufacturing technology that will create robust iPSC-based allogenic platforms in the immuno-oncology field.”
While comparatively new in the cell therapy space, human iPSC initiatives have garnered considerable interest because of the incredible potential they hold for cell therapy companies. iPSC technology gives scientists the ability to reprogramme a given skin or blood cell into a stem cell, which in turn can be differentiated into any target cell type of interest. That cell then can be further enhanced with custom cell engineering and edits to match customers’ needs.
“A guiding principle in this partnership is to expand access to, and drive down the cost of, cell therapies for patients in need,” Glass said. “The only way that happens is by building robust, industrialised and scalable platforms. And that is precisely what we will accomplish through our partnership with Ncardia. We’re very excited to collaborate with Stefan and his team of experts, and we look forward to fulfilling iPSC’s potential to deliver better therapies to patients around the world.”