The Scotsman

Edinburgh biotech Profactor Pharma gets £2m injection

● Company working towards clinical trials for haemophili­a treatment

- @kelvincapi­tal By SCOTT REID sreid@scotsman.com

An Edinburgh biotech company has sealed a £2 million funding injection to advance the treatment of haemophili­a.

Profactor Pharma (PFP), which is based just outside the capital at the Roslin Innovation Centre, has secured the money in a funding round led by the investment syndicate Kelvin Capital and supported by Ingenza and the Scottish Investment Bank, the investment arm of Scottish Enterprise.

The funding will be used for process optimisati­on and toxicology studies to enter clinical trials after 12 months as the firm continues to develop a low cost treatment for haemophili­a A.

According to the World Federation of Haemophili­a, there are more than 400,000 sufferers of the haemophili­a A disorder – where a protein made by the body to help make blood clot is either partly or completely missing – worldand wide but only some 151,000 are treated.

Jaymin Amin from PFP said: “The current global market is vast. However, current supplies only reach a third of those who need it.

“Our patented process delivers recombinan­t human factor VIII (RHFVIII) indistingu­ishable from a marketlead­ing product but due to the higher yield and lower cost of our product we are in an extremely strong position to lead in the massively undersuppl­ied markets of eastern Europe, Middle East and Asia.”

The Kelvin Capital syndicate, led by directors John Mcnicol and Angus Hay, represents private investors in the UK, Europe and the US.

Mcnicol said: “Profactor Pharma is set to disrupt a market with lower cost and higher quality treatments for 400,000 sufferers of haemophili­a A across the world.

“Current manufactur­ers only supply 30 per cent of the market with a higher cost treatment so the opportunit­y for PFP is really significan­t runs into billions of dollars. The disease affects one in 5,000 male births, which also means that the number of patients requiring treatment is growing annually.”

Ingenza managing director Ian Fotheringh­am said: “Profactor Pharma’s continued advancemen­t illustrate­s the enormous global impact possible from strategic SME [small and medium-sized enterprise] partnershi­ps within the Scottish and UK biotech communitie­s.”

Kerry Sharp, director at the Scottish Investment Bank, added: “We are delighted to continue our support for Profactor Pharma.

“Clearly there is a substantia­l global market for the company’s product and this phase of its developmen­t puts it on a pathway to full commercial­isation.”

The testing process has been successful­ly run at scale at a European contract manufactur­ing organisati­on and PFP is now ready to optimise the production process before moving into toxicology studies.

Kelvin initially invested in 2013 and has led five rounds of follow-on funding.

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