Israeli start-up NanoVation has been awarded a €2.5 million grant as part of the European Union’s Horizon 2020 EIC Accelerator program.
Sharon Buchbinder-Marom
The Haifa-based company is developing a new respiratory monitoring device, based on its nano-sensor technology. The device targets monitoring and management of patients with various respiratory conditions such as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). The grant will be used within the “SenseGuard” project and will allow NanoVation to further develop and commercialise their SenseGuard device for monitoring patients at hospitals and at home.
SenseGuard is a wireless wearable medical device for continuous monitoring of patients' breathing, based on the start-up’s nano-based respiratory sensor. The device has gone through clinical trials and received CE marking and is currently being deployed in hospitals in Israel and the EU for further clinical research of its capabilities.
The device is capable of measuring lung-function from patients’ regular breathing without any need for cooperation or unpleasant test execution by the patient. Approximately 328 million people worldwide are classified as suffering from COPD. The economic cost is huge and estimated at an annual spending of $49 billion in the U.S. and a similar amount in the EU. Approximately half of all direct COPD costs are associated with hospitalisation due to deterioration in the respiratory function of only 6.4% of the patients. These costs could be reduced through a home monitoring device that identifies any deterioration early and leads to a reduction in the need for hospitalisation through treatment intervention at the patient’s home.
Dr. Gregory Shuster, CEO and co-founder of NanoVation, said: “Lung function changes indicating a worsening condition can appear up to three weeks before reaching an acute state that often leads to hospitalisation and a lengthy rehabilitation. The residual lung damage will impair quality of life, or in the worst-case lead to death.
“Our pioneering device aims to enable identification of the early signs of deterioration in lung function, and enables early treatment. The cost of preventive intervention and treatment ranges from tens to hundreds of dollars, while they minimise unnecessary hospitalisations, which would cost between $10,000 and $40,000 for an individual in the US and between €3,000 and €10,000 in Europe, and translate into billions of dollars annually for the entire health system.
“The Horizon 2020 Program grant is a strong vote of confidence in NanoVation and will help us dramatically reduce the clinical and economic burden of COPD and other respiratory diseases."
Horizon 2020 is the biggest EU Research and Innovation program ever, and one of the most competitive. It supports SMEs with breakthrough innovation projects and aims to promote and fund discoveries and world-firsts by taking unique ideas from the lab to the market.
NanoVation was founded in 2014 as a spinoff from the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, and led by Dr. Gregory Shuster, CEO, Nadav Bachar, CTO, and Professor Hossam Haick, the company’s CSO. By now, the company raised $6 million in two rounds of financing and grant support from the EU Horizon 2020 program, as well as the Israel Innovation Authority.