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Healing the brain: Biotech to test new therapy for stroke

brain
Credit: Wikimedia Commons

A 3-year-old Sewickley, Pennsylvania, biotech firm is partnering with a Boston hospital to test a new drug combination, which has the promise of helping people debilitated by stroke.

Neuro-Innovators LLC is collaborating with Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital to evaluate the effectiveness of Neuro-Innovators' NIV-001 therapy to enhance and restore mobility and function lost through a burst or blocked vessel in the brain, which causes stroke. Some 750,000 people suffer strokes each year in the U.S. and two-thirds of more than seven million stroke survivors are left disabled, according to the Stroke Awareness Foundation, a Campbell, California-based nonprofit.

Spaulding is part of the Mass General Brigham health care system and the lead investigator for the study is Qing Mei Wang, a physician investigator in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Mass General Research Institute.

Neuro-Innovators' three-drug combination will be administered in a once-a-day pill to 40 people with motor disabilities who are recovering from stroke. They will be taking the medicine while undergoing standard rehabilitation protocols for .

The three drugs used in the therapy have already been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, which will speed commercialization of the new product. Neuro-Innovators will pursue an FDA fast-track pathway for product approval, which is designed to enhance the brain's neuroplasticity and healing after trauma. The company estimates the size of the market at more than $20 billion.

"It's a huge unmet need," said veteran entrepreneur and CEO Howison Schroeder, who founded Neuro-Innovators with physician Peter Doyle. "Nobody has put these drugs together."

Dr. Doyle also serves as chief medical officer at the company.

Neuro-Innovators employs eight part-time workers. The company raised $100,000 in a seed round last year, but has not yet turned a profit.

Schroeder previously served as CEO and board member of O'Hara-based Neuro Kinetics Inc., a brain injury assessment tool. Toronto, Canada-based Neurolign Technologies Inc. acquired Neuro Kinetics in 2019. Terms were not disclosed.

2024 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Citation: Healing the brain: Biotech to test new therapy for stroke (2024, June 4) retrieved 20 June 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-06-brain-biotech-therapy.html
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