The Swedish government and GE Healthcare are opening Testa Center—an innovation center in Uppsala, Sweden, to boost the commercialization of new technologies and support manufacturing capabilities in the life sciences sector. The 27,000-sq-ft Testa Center houses four bioprocessing laboratories with GE Healthcare technologies for testing new discoveries for the production of biopharmaceuticals, the world’s fastest-growing class of medicines1.
The Swedish government, which has invested around €10 million ($11.6 million) in the center and has identified life sciences as one of its top five partnership programs2, is striving to increase collaboration between the public sector, business, and academia to strengthen the country’s competitiveness and innovation capability. Earlier this year, the government opened an office that is fully dedicated to life sciences.
“This impressive test bed, Testa Center, which GE Healthcare chose to develop in partnership with the government promotes innovation, strengthens competitiveness and will help us provide more efficient care in the future,” Mikael Damberg, minister for enterprise and innovation, said. “This is important for Sweden and our life sciences strategy, as we are facing tougher health challenges globally. People grow older and chronic and lifestyle-related diseases are increasing. Life sciences is a knowledge-intensive sector with a high growth potential.”
Swedish biotechnology company BioLamina is the first company to run a project at Testa Center. Biolamina develops and manufactures protein-based reagents, Biolaminins used to create reliable and robust processes to develop therapeutic cells from stem cells.
The company recently entered into a collaboration with the pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk to support the development of new cell therapies targeting Parkinson’s disease, heart failure and loss of vision. BioLamina will use Testa Center to scale-up its production capacity, helping it deliver more reagents to its global customer base.
In addition to the investment coming from the Swedish government through its innovation agency, Vinnova, GE Healthcare has invested around €4.5 million ($5.2 million) in the center. The other sponsors are the national life sciences facilitator SWElife, Region Uppsala, the industry organization Uppsala BIO, the Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth and the Foundation for Collaboration between the Universities in Uppsala, Business, and the Public Sector (STUNS).
Testa Center is a national and international testbed open to academia, start-ups and industry. It is purpose-built for verifying digital, technical, and biological innovations in an authentic production setting. This helps organizations achieve a more time and cost-effective way to reduce the risks of securing industrial Proof-of-Concept, which is vital for later market introduction and sales.
The industrial-standard bioprocessing laboratories up to pilot-scale (non-GMP) are mainly based on single-use technologies from GE Healthcare Life Sciences. The center is owned and operated as a non-profit company by GE Healthcare in Uppsala that also provides operational support and expertise for project owners. The project owners retain full control of their intellectual property and data.
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References:
1. Of the top ten therapeutics on the market today, eight are biopharmaceuticals. (Evaluate Pharma, 2017.)
2. The other collaboration programs focus on the next generation’s travel and transport, Smart cities, Circular and bio-based economy, Life sciences and on a connected industry and new materials: www.government.se/articles/2016/07/innovation-partnership-programmes–mobilising-new-ways-to-meet-societal-challenges/
(Source: GE Healthcare)