| UNH
launches 2nd spinout company with NIH grants
Xemed working to give doctors inside
look at lungs
By Robert Emro, CEPS
A UNH
physics professor’s innovations enabling magnetic resonance
imaging to better see inside the lungs form the core of the university’s
second spinout company, backed by three new grants from the National
Institutes of Health.
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Bill
Hersman |
With
$300,000 awarded and another $2 million anticipated in NIH Small
Business Technology Transfer grants over the next 2 1⁄2 years,
Professor, and now CEO, Bill Hersman launched Xemed LLC to commercialize
the technology he developed for polarizing xenon gas.
“Prof. Hersman’s initial work was driven by intellectual
curiosity and wasn’t designed for commercial development,”
said UNH Vice President for Research and Public Service John Aber.
“This clearly demonstrates the value of basic research at
UNH, both for our ability to improve the human condition and to
support economic development.”
When inhaled by patients, polarized xenon allows MRI to produce
a clear picture of the lungs’ interior, which cannot be seen
with conventional techniques. It could benefit millions who suffer
from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the fourth leading cause
of death in the United States, by allowing doctors to see which
parts of the lungs are affected.
Hersman has secured FDA approval to test polarized xenon with MRI
in humans. The testing is scheduled for later this year with Sam
Patz, a collaborator at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
“The pressure is on now,” said Hersman. “The world
has been waiting long enough for a diagnostic procedure for lung
health, so we’re scrambling to provide that.”
Hersman developed his technique for polarizing xenon, the most effective
in the world, with previous NIH funding. The new grants will fund
research to further refine the technology and shrink its size.
“To make it practical we had to make it fit into a cabinet
small enough so that every hospital with an MRI unit could have
one,” said Hersman. “The challenge is to bring everything
together into a small space without the three magnetic fields involved
interfering with one another.”
UNH has already filed for three patents based on Hersman’s
innovations and is in the process of filing for two more. “This
is great for UNH and New Hampshire,” said Robert Dalton, director
of UNH’s Office of Intellectual Property Management, “because
students can continue to be involved in the development of the technology
and if the company takes off, it could be located right here in
the Seacoast.”
Still in an R&D phase, Xemed has only one employee besides Hersman,
but in the next three years he envisions hiring three or four more
to help hand-build polarizers. The company would probably not sell
them, said Hersman, but rather provide annual service agreements
to provide polarized xenon on site in hospitals and research institutions.
In time, Hersman said the number of employees could grow dramatically.
“If we can demonstrate it is effective in not only assessing
and monitoring diseases, but also in helping determine—whether
a patient should have drugs or surgery—it could be ten times
that,” he said, “and if HMO’s start reimbursing
for the procedure, it could be 100 times that.”
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