Blood transfusions are highly important. But, is the future of finding a blood match going to be manufactured in a lab?
What’s happening:
- Pre-clinical blood cell therapy startup Safi Biotherapeutics has raised $5M USD in seed funding
- The round was led by prominent deep tech venture capital fund J2 Ventures
The big idea:
- Safi Biotherapeutics has developed innovative technology that is capable of producing bio-manufactured red blood cells that contain targeted immune-phenotypes for chronic transfusion indications such as sickle-cell disease and chemo-therapy related anemia
- The manufactured red blood cells are grown from stem cells sources and are capable of being produced in sufficient quantity for full blood transfusions for patients
Why it matters:
- The United States Department of Defense originally backed Safi Biotherapeutics as part of their On-Demand Blood Program and have helped advance their technology with continual funding
- Many patients who require regular blood transfusions begin to develop immune system responses to multiple blood antigens which can severely complicate the process of finding a specific blood match or reliable donor
By the numbers:
- Since inception, the United States Department of Defense has put $15M USD into Safi Biotherapeutics
Going deeper:
- Scientific researchers and academics have been experimenting with growing red blood cells from stem cell sources for a long time, however the main challenge has always been reliably producing enough red blood cells to actually perform a transfusion and doing so in a cost efficient way
- Startups focused on new technology around blood have continued to attract significant venture capital excitement, with OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman previously backing a new blood testing startup and the European Innovation Council fund previously getting involved with a startup using autonomous robots to draw blood