Bath Chronicle

Uni tech to transform diabetes care

- Andrew Arthur andrew.arthur@reachplc.com

A University of Bath spin-out has secured £1.1m to develop technology it believes could “revolution­ise” the treatment of diabetes.

Transderma­l Diagnostic­s (TD) is working towards commercial­ising a wearable “smart-patch”, which it says could be the first completely needle-free blood sugar monitor.

The device is designed to use miniaturis­ed biosensors to sample fluid bathing the living cells of skin. TD says the contraptio­n then measures vital health biomarkers, including sugar, at levels which are very similar to those in blood – without the need to puncture the skin.

The company said the funding it had generated would enable it to establish a state-of-the-art laboratory facility and help accelerate the technical and commercial developmen­t of its tech.

The company’s chief executive and founder, Dr Luca Lipani, said: “We are excited to have on board investors with a deep understand­ing of the transforma­tive potential of Transderma­l Diagnostic­s’ technology platform.

Those funds will get us closer to our mission to revolution­ise the prevention, diagnosis and management of chronic conditions, starting with diabetes.”

Chief scientific officer Dr Adelina Ilie added: “The technology required a truly interdisci­plinary approach, and was only made possible by the latest advances across multiple fields, such as advanced nanomateri­als, nano- and biotechnol­ogy, and machine learningdr­iven data analysis.

“Scalable methods able to deliver a device like ours on a flexible platform were also essential.”

The pre-seed round was financed by an £800,000 equity investment, which was led by QUBIS, an innovation fund focused on spin-out companies, and includes the venture capital arm of Nottingham­based Pioneer Group, the UK’S largest developer and operator of lab space.

Immetric, a fund specialisi­ng in growing Ip-based, high-potential life science ventures also took part, alongside Angel networks Bristol Private Equity Club and Science Angel Syndicate.

TD was also awarded around £300,000 by government innovation agency Innovate UK award.

Dr Glenn Crocker, executive director at Pioneer Group, said: “In the UK alone, 15 million people suffer from long-term, chronic diseases meaning TD’S technology has huge real-world applicatio­ns and commercial­isation potential.

“Looking ahead, Pioneer Group will work closely with the company to help scale and commercial­ise the technology on offer by plugging the company into an ecosystem that has supported over 200 entreprene­urs and backed 38 startups.”

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