As published in the
UConn Advance, May 3, 2004.
Tech Transfer Programs Move University Science to Marketplace
By Pat Keefe
When Professor of Prosthodontics and Operative Dentistry Dr. Martin
Freilich and his colleagues discovered a method for promoting oral bone
growth, they realized it was an opportunity to help patients who
otherwise couldn't have dental implants.
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Dr. Martin Freilich holds a sample of a dental fiber strand from
his work.
Photo by Peter Morenus |
Michael Newborg, the executive director of the University of
Connecticut's Center for Science and Technology Commercialization (CSTC),
saw it as a way to bring a University science discovery to the
marketplace.
After meeting with Freilich and doing some assessment and evaluation,
the CSTC staff began the patent-acquiring process with the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office. As a result, the patent application is pending,
and the technology is being further developed with the hope that
commercial firms will also see an opportunity in the new process.
"There are a number of factors that come into play when you're
weighing commercial viability," says Newborg. "You have to consider the
need for the product or process. You need to think about its
patentability, but also who are the potential licensees, and what is the
market."
Such technology transfer at UConn has accelerated in recent years.
Invention disclosures at the University have risen from a total of 45 in
1999 to between 70 and 80 a year now. Between 12 and 16 new options and
licenses are signed annually, and gross revenues from tech transfer have
risen to $725,000.
The patents represent research and discovery in the physical sciences
as well as the bio-sciences. At the Storrs campus, for example, James
Fenton, H. Russell Kunz, and Jung-Chou Lin, received a patent for
"Membrane Electrode Assemblies Using Ionic Composite Membranes," a
critical process for fuel cell technologies; and George and Catherine
Wu, Health Center faculty, patented "Propagation of Human Hepatocytes in
Non-Human Mammals," a process that allows for growth of human liver
cells in lab animals.
The University has begun several initiatives aimed at bringing bench
to the marketplace:
- The CSTC works with faculty and administrators on all campuses to
talk about the need for, and the advantages of, technology
commercialization. The center's staff specialize in evaluating
inventions from the physical sciences, such as chemistry, engineering,
and material science; and inventions from the life sciences including
biotechnology, human health techniques and molecular targets. They also
assist with patenting and business development.
- The Research and Development Corporation, a subsidiary of the UConn
Foundation, evaluates technologies that can become potential businesses,
recruits venture capital sources to start the businesses, and helps
provide consulting sources to get the businesses going.
- The Technology Incubation Program was established to assist and
accelerate the successful establishment and development of
entrepreneurial companies. Incubator space is available in Storrs and
Farmington and is planned for Avery Point. Ian Hart, a professor of
animal science and associate dean for research and advanced studies in
the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, was appointed director
for industrial initiatives for the program in 2002.
To celebrate the University's achievements in tech transfer to date,
a President's Patent Awards Dinner is scheduled for May 11. The evening
will honor faculty members whose inventions were given U.S. patents in
2003.
"The University of Connecticut, as an institution, has significant
untapped potential for placing its inventions in the marketplace and
achieving reasonable returns for its activity," says Newborg. "The CSTC
stands ready to assist researchers in this endeavor." |