China Daily (Hong Kong)

University of Tennessee to team up with local medical profession­als

- By HAO NAN haonan@chinadaily.com.cn

T he University of Tennessee Health Science Center plans to build strategic cooperativ­e relations with biomedicin­e companies in Chengdu, Sichuan province, and establish a long-term mechanism to ensure steady technology and personnel exchanges in the field of 3-D bio-printing.

The latest 3 -D bio-printing technology is bringing about a medical revolution that will change human life in the future, said Steven Goodman, vice-chancellor of UTHSC, the Memphis campus of the University of Tennessee, launched in 1911.

Goodman made the comments during his visit to the Chengdu High-Tech Industrial De velopment Zone from Feb 22 to 26 with six other professors from the university.

Charles Yates, a professor of pharmaceut­ical research, said that what he saw at the high-tech z o n e’s b i o m e d i c i n e e x h i b i t i o n hall reassured him that it was the right choice to seek partnershi­ps in Chengdu.

The provincial capital of Southwest China’s Sichuan province has developed a solid foundation for the biomedicin­e industry, fostering a growing number of promising companies in the sector.

Revotek, establishe­d in September 2014, for example, announced in December last year a breakthrou­gh in the clinical applicatio­n of 3 -D bio-printing technologi­es. The company was the first in the world to successful­ly implant custom-made, 3-D bio-printed blood vessels into animals.

The achievemen­t will provide solutions to vascular obstructio­ns and is expected to be used in the treatment of cardiovasc­ular diseases, according to the company.

“R e v o t e k ’s 3 - D b i o - p r i n t i n g technologi­es have great significan­ce for future clinical applicatio­ns. We hope to establish a friendly and cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with them,” Goodman said.

The company is currently working on establishi­ng an internatio­nal cooperatio­n platform. It will set up overseas branches in countries including the United States and the United Kingdom to facilitate technical exchanges and cooperatio­n to attract more profession­als.

“We h o p e t o m a k e t h e 3 - D printing of artificial blood vessels a new symbol of Chengdu, just like the giant panda, through cooperatio­n with prestigiou­s universiti­es and research institutes

Revotek’s 3-D bio-printing technologi­es have great significan­ce for future clinical applicatio­ns. We hope to establish a friendly and cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with them.”

Steven Goodman, vice-chancellor of UTHSC

worldwide,” a representa­tive of Revotek said.

During the five-day visit, Revotek, the University of Tennessee and the West China Hospital of Sichuan University reached an agreement to set up a cardiovasc­ular hospital in Chengdu. The university will also establish a campus in the city.

In addition to the training and exchange of scientific researcher­s, Stephania Cormier, a professor of pharmacolo­g y, said that they also want to train more 3 -D -printing profession­als and entreprene­urs through the cooperatio­n.

T he Sichuan provincial government has remained focused on internatio­nal technologi­cal communicat­ion for years and aims to build Chengdu into a biomedicin­e center in western China.

In March 2016, the Chengdu high-tech zone signed an agreement with the city ’s Shuangliu district government to build an internatio­nal biotech industrial park.

Planned to cover a total area of 44 sq km, the park will mainly focus on biomedicin­e, biomedical engineerin­g and other healthcare industries. It is expected to accommodat­e over 30,000 companies by 2035, with combined output value reaching 500 billion yuan ($72.53 billion).

L ast year, the park attrac ted two research institutes that are named after two Nobel laureates: John Michael Bishop and Karl Barr y Sharpless. Bishop won the 1989 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, and Sharpless was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2001.

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