QB3/CERSI Seminar: Ying Huang & Jakob Reiser, FDA/CBER. "Safety Considerations for Gene Editing and Other Gene Therapy Products: An FDA Perspective"

Join us to hear from two experts at the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). Dr. Ying Huang will discuss regulatory considerations for gene therapy products involving gene editing technologies. Dr. Jakob Reiser will describe ongoing work in his laboratory dealing with safety issues pertaining to lentiviral vectors. Seminar hosted by QB3 and UCSF/Stanford CERSI.

Abstract

FDA/CBER has a long history of regulating gene therapy products, including genetically modified cellular products that are generated using integrating viral vectors. Development of HIV-1-based gene therapy vectors to deliver therapeutic genes into humans with various medical conditions has been ongoing over the past two decades. The risks associated with these promising vectors include activation of oncogenes during random integration of the vectors into the genome and the ability to spread from cell to cell through the formation of replication-competent lentivirus. This experience has contributed to CBER’s understanding in the regulation of products that incorporate use of gene editing (GE) technologies to generate investigational therapies intended to treat a disease.

The regulatory review of gene therapy products uses a science-based approach that considers the risks and benefits of each investigational product in the framework of the respective clinical trial. We will describe the safety concerns associated with gene therapy products, including those that incorporate GE technologies, in the context of our research efforts aimed to improve the safety profile of HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors.

The introduction of GE technologies to generate gene therapy products raises unique concerns regarding whether the GE component is appropriately designed and optimized for specificity, and how the gene editing process may impact the product safety profile. CBER’s considerations for the preclinical evaluation of gene therapy products involving GE technologies build upon the extensive scientific and regulatory history that exists for gene therapy products. Specific safety concerns include the potential for gene editing events at off-target sites, chromosomal translocations, and genomic instability. We will discuss CBER’s preclinical expectations for gene therapy products with a focus on the products that incorporate GE technologies.

Where and When

Room N-114, Genentech Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (600 16th St., San Francisco)

4:00-5:00 pm, Tuesday, October 3

Eventbrite - Ying Huang & Jakob Reiser, FDA/CBER: “Pre-Clinical Evaluation of Gene Therapy Products Including Products Obtained Using Gene Editing Technologies”

About the Speakers

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Dr. Ying Huang has been a Pharm/Tox master reviewer at FDA/CBER/OTAT/DCEPT since 2004. She is responsible for the review of the preclinical evaluations for proof-of-concept and safety related to cell and gene therapies, and gene editing derived gene therapy products on oncology and non-oncology diseases. Her review activities have been involved in submissions of Investigational New Drug (IND) including pre-preIND and pre-IND, and Biologics License Application (BLA). In addition to her review work, she is one of the representatives for the US FDA in the International Pharmaceutical Regulators Forum (IPRF) / Gene Therapy Working Group (GTWG). She was the co-representative for FDA/CBER in the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Validation of Alternative Methods (ICCVAM) during 2006 – April 2017. Prior to the FDA, Dr. Huang received her Ph.D. degree in Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Toronto, Canada, and subsequently an NIH IRTA fellowship at NIH/NIDDK before became a senior scientist at Genetic Therapy Inc., a Novartis Company.

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Dr. Jakob Reiser received a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of Basel in Switzerland. He then did postdoctoral work in Virology and Protein Chemistry in the Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University School of Medicine as an American Cancer Society Junior Fellow and at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund Laboratories in London. At Stanford he helped develop the Western Blot technique and was instrumental in setting up the original chromatin immunoprecipitation method.

Dr. Reiser was a group leader and lecturer in Biotechnology at ETH (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology) in Zürich, Switzerland between 1986 and 1994. His work there focused on quorum sensing in Pseudomonads.

Dr. Reiser joined the NIH in Bethesda, MD in 1994 to gain experience in the emerging field of gene therapy. He worked with HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors since 1995. The group was among the first to develop such vectors.

Dr. Reiser moved to the Louisiana State University (LSU) Health Sciences Center in New Orleans in 1999 to join the Gene Therapy Program as Associate Professor of Medicine and as the Director of the Gene Therapy Vector Core. At LSU he gained experience applying such vectors in the context of in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo applications. Past in vivo applications included the delivery of therapeutic genes to the brains of mice afflicted with globoid cell leukodystrophy. This work was supported by R21 and R01 grants from the NIH on which he was a PI.

Dr. Reiser moved to FDA/CBER in 2008 as a PI. His laboratory at CBER uses genetic engineering methods to improve the safety of HIV-1-based lentiviral lentiviral vectors. He spends 50% of his time as a CMC reviewer of gene therapy files.

Meet the FDA. Focus: Genomic Medicine

Space is limited. Please only register if you are sure you can attend!

We're pleased to welcome four representatives of the FDA's Center for Devices & Radiological Health, specialists in genomics, for an open roundtable discussion. These FDA scientists work on investigational biomarker tests, molecular testing for genetic diseases, oncology molecular tests, companion diagnostics, and next generation technologies. This is an opportunity for entrepreneurs to interact with officials responsible for regulating commercial technologies, help them understand startups' perspective, and make the regulatory process smoother.

Where and When

4:00-6:00 PM, Wednesday, September 20

Room 2103, Mission Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (550 16th St., San Francisco)

Eventbrite - Meet the FDA. Focus: Genomic Medicine

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

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Dr. David Litwack received a B.S. in Chemistry from the University of Chicago, and a Ph.D. in Biology from MIT. After postdoctoral studies at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, he joined the faculty of the University of Maryland School of Medicine as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology and a member of the Program in Neuroscience. In that role, Dr. Litwack directed an NIH-funded lab that studied the role of transcription factors in neurogenesis in the mammalian brain and in human embryonic stem cells, and was a founding member of the School’s Center for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine. In 2010, Dr. Litwack was awarded an AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellowship in NCI’s Office of Biorepositories and Biospecimen Research. During this fellowship, he led several efforts to develop policy and programs to advance the use of biobanking for personalized medicine. In 2012, Dr. Litwack joined the Personalized Medicine Staff of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health at the FDA, where he develops policies to guide the review of investigational biomarker tests, companion diagnostics, and next generation technologies.

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Dr. Hisani Madison is a Senior Scientific Reviewer in the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health (OIR) at the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) in the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Dr. Madison leads the review of submissions in the Molecular Pathology and Cytology Branch as part of the Division of Molecular Genetics and Pathology (DMGP). The Molecular Pathology and Cytology Branch is responsible for reviewing a wide range of devices including next generation sequencing technologies and hybridization-based molecular techniques to detect genetic alterations associated with cancer. Dr. Madison specializes in review of devices intended to aid in selection of therapy for patients with solid tumors.

Prior to her current position, Dr. Madison was a postdoctoral fellow in the Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch of the Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics at the National Cancer Institute where she conducted molecular epidemiologic research focusing on breast cancer etiology and heterogeneity. Dr. Madison obtained her Ph.D. in Pathology from Duke University, where her doctoral research focused on identifying and characterizing genetic and epigenetic markers for the early detection, prognosis and prediction of breast and ovarian cancer. She also has an M.P.H. from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health where she trained in epidemiology and biostatistics and received a Certificate in Health Disparities and Health Inequality.

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Dr. Reena Philip currently holds the position of Director in the Division of Molecular Genetics and Pathology in the Office of In Vitro Diagnostic Devices and Radiological Health, at Center for Devices and Radiologic Health at the FDA. At the FDA, she has been involved in many diverse activities including premarket clearance/approval, manufacturer assistance, post market regulatory compliance actions, and an ongoing participant in FDA multi-center reviews in companion diagnostics.

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Brittany Schuck, Ph.D. is a Senior Staff Fellow in the Division of Chemistry and Toxicology Devices in the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health (OIR) at the FDA. In her current position, Dr. Schuck contributes to regulatory review of in vitro diagnostic devicesto assure that patients have access to safe, effective, and high quality medical devices.  Dr. Schuck is also involved in OIR’s efforts to foster innovation and advance regulatory science of in vitro diagnostic devices. Dr. Schuck’s regulatory review interests include genomics, proteomics, and microfluidic devices for use in specialized chemistry and cardio-renal diagnostic devices.

Prior to joining the FDA, Dr. Schuck completed her Ph.D. in Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Eshelman School of Pharmacy and then completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

QB3 Seminar: Zach Serber, Zymergen. "CSO: Point of the Innovation Spear"

Maintaining a competitive edge in technology is key to startup success. The chief technology or science officer keeps that edge sharp by conceiving and developing new innovations, often managing a team of scientists and engineers. So what's it like to have that responsibility? Join us on September 19 to find out. We'll hear from Zach Serber, CSO at Zymergen, which was recently profiled by Science for its application of robotics and machine learning to the refinement of industrial microbes.

Where and When

Room 160, Helen Diller Bldg., UCSF Mission Bay (1450 Third St., San Francisco)

12:00-1:00 pm, Tuesday, September 19

Eventbrite - Zach Serber, Zymergen. "CSO: Point of the Innovation Spear"

About the Speaker

Dr. Zach Serber is a scientist and entrepreneur devoted to using bioengineering to drive the next industrial revolution. In 2013, Dr. Serber co-founded Zymergen, a technology company unlocking the power of biology by combining biology with technology such as robotics and machine learning. Today, he is the company’s Chief Science Officer and Vice President of Development overseeing scientific direction, new products, and development teams.

Dr. Serber was previously the Director of Biology at Amyris where he worked on manufacturing bio-derived transportation fuels, on lowering the cost of the antimalarial drug, Artemisinin, and on developing advanced tools for engineering biology. He has been PI on multiple DARPA contracts including an $8M contract devoted to improving the genome engineering cycle and, currently, a $31M contract to develop 360 microbes, each producing a novel molecule with the potential to generate innovative polymers and materials.

Dr. Serber has 17 peer-reviewed publications in journals such as Cell and Science, multiple patents, and has worked as a research fellow at Stanford University Medical School. He has a PhD in Biophysics from University of California San Francisco, a MSc in Neuroscience from the University of Edinburgh, and a BA from Columbia University.

Zach lives with his wife, two children, and dog on a sailboat in Sausalito, CA.

Rosenman D-Series: Justin Klein, New Enterprise Associates

Join us Tuesday, September 12, when venture capitalist Justin Klein of New Enterprise Associates (NEA) will give us an inside view on the current state of healthcare investing. Christine Winoto, director of the Rosenman Institute, will interview Justin.

Where and When

Room 212, Byers Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (1700 4th St., San Francisco)

5:00-7:00 pm, Tuesday, September 12

Eventbrite - An Interview with Justin Klein of New Enterprise Associates

About the Speaker

Justin Klein joined NEA in 2006 and is a Partner on the healthcare team. He focuses on medical device, healthcare technology, and biopharmaceutical company investments. He serves as a director of Advanced Cardiac Therapeutics, Cartiva, ChromaCode, FIRE1, Intact Vascular, Personal Genome Diagnostics, PhaseBio Pharmaceuticals, Relievant Medsystems, Senseonics (NYSE: SENS), VertiFlex, Vesper Medical, and VytronUS. Justin’s past board memberships and investments include CV Ingenuity (acquired by Covidien), Nevro (NYSE: NVRO), Topera (acquired by Abbott), TriVascular (NASDAQ: TRIV), and Ulthera (acquired by Merz). He is also a member of the advisory boards for the National Venture Capital Association’s Medical Industry Group and its Medical Innovation and Competitiveness Coalition (MedIC), as well as a member of AdvaMed's Business Development Committee.

Prior to NEA, Justin worked for the Duke University Health System—reporting directly to the hospital CEO on health system strategy, finance and clinical service unit operations—as Duke built one of the nation's first and largest healthcare integrated delivery systems. Justin concurrently earned his MD from the Duke University School of Medicine and his JD from Harvard Law School. He has also served as a member of the Board of Trustees of Duke University, where he earned his AB in Economics and his BS in Biological Anthropology and Anatomy.

QB3 Seminar: "Research in Space to Benefit Life on Earth," Liz Warren & Miki Sode, Center for the Advancement of Science in Space

Have you thought about the effect of gravity’s influence on your research? Gravity is a controlled variable on the International Space Station. Many researchers, biotech and pharmaceutical companies and entrepreneurs have been conducting breakthrough research on the ISS National Lab to take advantage of its unique environment. Liz Warren and Miki Sode from Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) will present opportunities available for you to bring your science and innovation to higher potential, located 250 miles above Earth. Come join us on August 10th to learn more and start thinking about what science you would do onboard the ISS NL.

Where and When

Noon to 1:00 PM, Thursday, August 10

Room N-114, Genentech Hall, UCSF Mission Bay

Eventbrite - QB3 Seminar: "Research in Space to Benefit Life on Earth," Miki Sode & Liz Warren, CASIS

About the Speakers

Liz Warren, Ph.D., Associate Program Scientist, CASIS

Liz Warren, Ph.D., Associate Program Scientist, CASIS

Liz was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, and attended the University of California at Davis for both her undergraduate and doctoral degrees in physiology. For her doctoral work, she investigated the effects of gravity as a continuum on energy balance in rats. She completed post-doctoral work in the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Laboratory of Cell Growth, and the Neuroscience Laboratory at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. She performed a variety of roles at NASA, including serving as Deputy Project Scientist for the NASA Bed Rest and Artificial Gravity Projects. Liz also spent several years as an Operations Lead in Mission Control for the ISS Medical Project. She joined CASIS in June of 2016. Liz enjoys travel, running, and learning to play the ukulele.

Miki Sode, Ph.D., Commercial Innovation Program Manager, CASIS

Miki Sode, Ph.D., Commercial Innovation Program Manager, CASIS

Miki combines her multi-disciplinary background and passion for space to advocate for utilizing the orbital environment to advance science and technology. Her curiosity about nature, particularly gravity (and the lack thereof), drove her to obtain a BA in Physics from UC Berkeley, a MS in Aerospace Engineering from San Jose State University and a Ph.D. in Bioengineering from UCSF & Berkeley's joint program. It was her work on bone loss in astronauts while at NASA Ames Research Center that motivated her to pursue her doctoral work on imaging and analysis of trabecular bone structure due to varying mechanical loading. Miki spent several years as a scientist at a clinical research organization helping pharmaceutical companies run clinical trials for FDA approval, mainly for therapeutics for musculoskeletal systems. Born in Tokyo, Japan, Miki calls the San Francisco Bay Area her home. Miki enjoys cooking, baking, arts & craft, skiing, and ballet, but most of all, spending time with her family to explore more of the beautiful Bay Area.

The Fourth Annual Rosenman Symposium

At the Rosenman Institute we’re here to support medtech startups. We connect entrepreneurs to the resources and expertise they need to commercialize their technologies. Helping innovators forge connections is why we’ve brought our legendary symposium back for a fourth year. Join us in San Francisco on June 21 to learn from leaders in the field, meet CEOs of exciting early-stage companies, and get insight on how industry forms strategic partnerships with startups.

Agenda

1:00 pm Registration

1:30 pm Welcome: Christine Winoto, Deputy Director, QB3; Director, Rosenman Institute

1:35 pm Steve Hetts, UCSF: "Hitting Cancer Hard While Limiting Collateral Damage"

1:55 pm Showcase: 2017 Rosenman Innovators

2:05 pm Justin Roberts, Medtronic: "TAVR: Developing and Cultivating a Breakthrough Therapy"

2:25 pm Showcase: 2017 Rosenman Innovators

2:35 pm Break

3:00 pm Robert Gaunt, University of Pittsburgh: "Wired Brains: Technology & Neuroscience for Rehabilitation"

3:20 pm Showcase: 2017 Rosenman Innovators

3:30 pm Richard Rapoza, Abbott Vascular: "Unexpected Consequences in Clinical Trial Design"

3:50 pm Showcase: 2017 Rosenman Innovators

4:00 pm Break

4:30 pm Panel Discussion: "Game of Thrones: Strategic Acquisition in Medtech"
Lisa Suennen, GE Ventures (moderator)
Jennifer Kozak, Johnson & Johnson
Chris Eso, Medtronic
Virginia Giddings, Stryker

5:30 pm Reception

QB3 Seminar: Meytal Waiss, FreeMind. "Beyond the SBIR: Non-Dilutive Funding for Your Startup"

Billions of non-dilutive dollars are awarded annually across scientific fields, mainly from NIH, DOD, and other government sources. In 2016 alone, domestic for-profit organizations received approximately $2.7 billion from awards ranging from $200k to multi-millions; ~$2 billion came from non-SBIR funders. In this presentation, Meytal Waiss of the FreeMind Group will give an overview of the non-dilutive funding landscape with an emphasis on NIH, DOD, and BARDA. She will discuss alternatives to SBIR/STTR, and describe the various mechanisms and pockets of money available, potential for funding, and means to maximize your chances of winning an award. Download the slide deck

Watch the YouTube video

Where and When

Room 212, Byers Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (1700 4th St., San Francisco)

12:00-1:00 pm, Thursday, June 15

Eventbrite - QB3 Seminar: Meytal Waiss, FreeMind. "Beyond the SBIR: Non-Dilutive Funding for Your Startup"

About the Speaker

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Meytal Waiss, Director of Business Development at FreeMind, has spent most of her career as a part of the scientific community. Previously a Senior Project Manager in FreeMind’s Professional Department, Meytal has helped clients manage the complex application production process, submit, and win, and is now utilizing her strong background in the life sciences, grant writing, and understanding of non-dilutive funding to guide potential clients through the first stages of the process. Meytal holds a Master’s degree in Cellular and Developmental Biology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she specialized in Neurodegenerative Diseases and Microscopy.

Rosenman D-Series: Marijke Annis, Ruckus Partners. "Reimbursement 101 for Medtech Startups"

Regulatory approval no longer guarantees market access. Payers control the health care dollar and ultimately if and how patients access new technologies. Understanding the reimbursement challenges your technology may face and setting a strategy early in the product development process will help ensure you can navigate payer challenges. Attendees will leave with an understanding of the current U.S. reimbursement system and how to navigate coding, payment and coverage.

Where and When

Room 212, Byers Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (1700 4th St., San Francisco)

5:00-7:00 pm, Thursday, May 18

Eventbrite - D-Series: Marijke Annis, Ruckus Partners. "Reimbursement 101 for Medtech Startups"

Agenda

5:00-6:00 pm: Talk and Q&A

6:00 pm onward: Networking

About the Speaker

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Marijke Annis, MSPH, Founder, is a reimbursement expert whose work has realized multiple, positive coverage and payment decisions for innovative medical solutions across devices and diagnostics. Having worked in payer relations for integrated health delivery systems, she offers a unique ‘inside-payer’ perspective that serves to shape these successful strategies. Prior to founding Ruckus Partners, she held leadership positions for companies and health care providers across the market - hospital and physician groups, diagnostics and medical devices and she knows cardiology, women’s health, oncology, hematology, pulmonology, and ophthalmology. Her former roles include reimbursement leadership for CardioDx, Abbott Vascular, and Guidant, and in managed care for Tenet Health Care.

Marijke received a MSPH from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and a BA from Emory University.

Leadership in Biopharma: a Conversation with John Milligan, CEO, Gilead Sciences

Gilead Sciences is a Bay Area titan, a life science leader known for its pipeline of antivirals and Hepatitis C therapeutics. Its CEO is John F. Milligan, PhD, a former UCSF postdoc, who joined the company in 1990 as its 32nd employee. Join us on May 11 when Barry Selick, CEO of Threshold Pharmaceuticals and himself a former UCSF postdoc, will engage Milligan in a conversation touching on topics such as Milligan's career path from postdoc to CEO of a major biotech, his experience leading it, and how Gilead feeds its pipeline of innovation and develops new products.

Brook Byers, a Founding Partner of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and a member of the UCSF Board of Overseers, will provide introductory remarks.

Where and When

Byers Auditorium, Genentech Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (600 16th St., San Francisco)

4:00-5:00 pm, Thursday, May 11

Eventbrite - A Conversation with John Milligan, CEO, Gilead Sciences

Agenda

4:00 pm Introduction: Brook Byers, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

4:00-5:00 pm Remarks from John Milligan, Gilead Sciences, followed by audience Q&A and a conversation moderated by Barry Selick, Threshold Pharmaceuticals

5:00-6:30 pm Reception

About the Speakers

Dr. John F. Milligan joined Gilead Sciences in 1990 and was appointed Chief Executive Officer in March 2016. He began his career at Gilead as a research scientist, and subsequently held leadership positions in project management and corporate development before being named Chief Financial Officer in 2002. He was appointed Chief Operating Officer in 2007 and President in 2008.

During his tenure at Gilead, Dr. Milligan has led teams that have developed, manufactured and commercialized more than 20 new therapies for significant unmet needs. He has managed multiple transformative acquisitions, licensing agreements and financings, helping the company grow into a worldwide organization reaching more than 10 million patients. He is a member of the board of Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc. and a Trustee of Ohio Wesleyan University.

Dr. Milligan received his BA from Ohio Wesleyan University, his PhD in biochemistry from the University of Illinois and was an American Cancer Society postdoctoral fellow at the University of California at San Francisco.

Harold E. "Barry" Selick, Ph.D. joined Threshold as Chief Executive Officer in June 2002. Between June 2002 and July 2007, Dr. Selick was also a Venture Partner of Sofinnova Ventures, Inc., a venture capital firm. From January 1999 to April 2002, he was Chief Executive Officer of Camitro Corporation, a biotechnology company that was acquired by ArQule. From 1992 to 1999, he was at Affymax Research Institute, the drug discovery technology development center for Glaxo Wellcome plc, most recently as Vice President of Research. Prior to working at Affymax he held scientific positions at Protein Design Labs, Inc. and Anergen, Inc. As a staff scientist at Protein Design Labs, he co-invented the technology underlying the creation of fully humanized antibody therapeutics and applied that to PDL's first product, Zenapax, which was developed and commercialized by Roche for the prevention of kidney transplant rejection. Dr. Selick received his B.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and was a Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer Fund Fellow and an American Cancer Society Senior Fellow at the University of California, San Francisco.

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Brook Byers is a Founding Partner of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. A venture capital investor since 1972, Brook has been closely involved with more than 60 new technology-based ventures, many of which have become public companies. He formed the first life sciences practice group in the venture capital profession in 1984 and led KPCB to become a premier venture capital firm in the medical, healthcare and biotechnology sectors. KPCB has invested in and helped build more than 170 life sciences companies that have developed hundreds of products to treat underserved medical needs for many millions of patients. Brook was the founding president and then chairman of four biotechnology companies that were incubated in KPCB’s offices and went on to become public companies with an aggregate market value of more than US$8 billion. He serves on the board of directors of Cell Design Labs, Enjoy, Newsela and Zephyr Health. Brook is also a Lifetime Director on the UCSF Board of Overseers. Full bio on KPCB website

Rosenman D-Series: Laura Parmer-Lohan, Ruckus Partners. "So, You Want to Go to Market in Medtech. Now What?"

There are many decisions to be made from now until launch. This discussion will cover the role of product marketing in medtech and the critical milestones for preparing your product for launch, from crafting a compelling value proposition to developing strategies for the key stakeholders involved in the buying process. Attendees will leave with a clear overview of how product marketing can be used as a strategic element in a company’s long term success.

Where and When

Room 212, Byers Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (1700 4th St., San Francisco)

5:00-7:00 pm, Thursday, April 13

Eventbrite - D-Series: Laura Parmer-Lohan, Ruckus Partners. "So, You Want to Go to Market in Medtech. Now What?"

Agenda

5:00-6:00 pm: Talk and Q&A

6:00 pm onward: Networking

About the Speaker

Laura Parmer-Lohan, MBA, is a founder of Ruckus Partners a consulting firm specializing in marketing and reimbursement for medtech innovation. She is a marketing leader who has demonstrated capabilities from product portfolio strategy development to product launch to revenue generating product lifecycle marketing. Laura specializes in uncovering customer needs and connecting this with the product marketing strategy to motivate the customer to action. She has led or participated in the launch of more than 24 products from cardiovascular therapeutic devices, type 2 diabetes first-in-class biopharmaceutical to specialty oncology reference lab test services and digital health apps.

Laura is an advisor for LaunchPad Digital Health, FAST program mentor for California Life Sciences Association, guest instructor for UCSF/UCB MTM Program and Haas School of Business MBA/MPH Program and the events co-lead for MedtechWomen.

Her former roles include marketing leadership at diaDexus, Sequenta, Genoptix (now Novartis), Amylin (now AstraZeneca), and Guidant (now Abbott Vascular). She received her MBA from UC Berkeley, Haas School of Business, and her bachelor of arts from UC Santa Cruz.

QB3 Seminar: Ryan Davison, ACS. "How Federal Politics Impact Funding for Science and Startups"

Washington politics usually seem far removed from life at the lab bench. But issues at the federal level can affect what funds the government makes available for grants of all types, from R01 to SBIR. If you understand the ever-changing landscape, you may be able frame your application so it is successful, or expand into research areas that are more likely to get funded. To get the big picture from Ryan Davison, government affairs manager at the American Chemical Society in Washington, DC, join us on April 3. Ryan will provide a general political update, highlight specific pieces of legislation meaningful to researchers, discuss key congressional committees, and explain how Republicans and Democrats view the economy differently. Additionally, Ryan will take a look at SBIR and proof-of-concept funding, and highlight areas likely to get funding in the near future.

Where and When

Room N-114, Genentech Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (600 16th St., San Francisco)

Noon to 1:00 pm, Monday, April 3

Eventbrite - QB3 Seminar: Ryan Davison, ACS. "How Federal Politics Impact Funding for Science and Startups"

About the Speaker

Dr. Ryan Davison is currently the Manager of Government Affairs at the American Chemical Society where he advocates for legislation that supports the chemical industry. Dr. Davison manages advocacy and policy development on priority issues including manufacturing, tax and trade, intellectual property, patents, biomedical research, innovation and competitiveness, agency funding, and appropriations. Most of his time is spent on Capitol Hill meeting with lawmakers and their staff, attending Congressional hearings and mark-ups, and monitoring bills relevant to the chemical enterprise. Ryan possesses a distinct background of policy and science experience. Before joining the ACS he worked as a policy Fellow at the National Academy of Sciences, served as Biosecurity Analyst at the Federation of American Scientists, was a post-doctoral Fellow at Georgetown University, and an adjunct professor at George Washington University. He holds and Bachelor's and Master's degree in Psychology from Appalachian State University, a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), and is in a unique position to be able to personally highlight the importance of innovation and research to members of Congress and their staff.

QB3 Seminar: David Spellmeyer. "Score! How Your SBIR/STTR Application is Reviewed and Scored"

The SBIR/STTR grant review process can be extremely frustrating and opaque. But if you understand how the reviewers operate, you can improve the chances that your application will succeed. On March 23, David Spellmeyer, an expert SBIR consultant, will reveal the inner workings of an SBIR/STTR Study Section Review Panel. David’s talk will cover panel composition, review assignments, meeting mechanics, critiques, and the scoring process. Join us to learn several ways that you can make your application stand out.

About the Speaker

David Spellmeyer, Ph.D., is Principal at Interlaken Associates, a consulting firm working with early stage companies on a wide variety of projects, including SBIR/STTR support. David is a regular member of SBIR/STTR Study Sections and recently served as Chair of the IMST-14 Study Section - Small Business: Computational, Modeling, and Biodata Management.

David brings his clients broad technical and business expertise gained in companies both small and large. He has been involved in the development of several technologies as a scientist, including combinatorial chemistry, label free screening, and translational applications of single-cell functional pathway analysis. Development of these technologies required overcoming many difficult steps of standardization, qualification, and validation of components of laboratory and information systems for use in clinical applications.

David works very closely with business development teams and has been involved in establishing over 20 non-dilutive strategic corporate partnerships, 4 mergers and acquisitions, several rounds of venture financing, one joint venture. He is an Adjunct Associate Professor at UCSF and an active mentor at UCSF’s Entrepreneurship Center, California Life Sciences Institute’s FAST Program, and OneStart Americas.

QB3 Seminar: "US Immigration Policy in Flux: How it Affects Scientists, Startups, and You." Atessa Chehrazi & Sang Kim, Jackson Hertogs

View the video of this talk

More than half of the startups in the QB3 network were founded by entrepreneurs not born in the US. And, at some point, many startups hire foreign scientists because of their specialized skills. But the procedures for applying for immigrant and non-immigrant visas, which have never been simple, have become more complicated since Donald Trump was elected president. To learn more about how Trump’s executive orders, and recent bills introduced in Congress, may affect your company’s hiring or your own employment prospects—and to get a refresher on the US immigration system, with a biotech focus—join us on March 2 for a special talk by Atessa Chehrazi and Sang Kim from the immigration law firm of Jackson & Hertogs.

Where and When

Noon to 1:00 pm, Thursday, March 2

Room N-114, Genentech Hall, UCSF Mission Bay (600 16th St., San Francisco)

About the Speakers

Atessa Chehrazi

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Atessa has been a partner at Jackson & Hertogs since April 2013 and an associate/senior associate since July 2000. She was previously an associate at Maggio & Kattar in Washington, D.C. from 1996 to 2000. She has held several volunteer roles within the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) during her career. For AILA’s Northern California Chapter, she has served as Chair, Vice-Chair, Treasurer, U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Service (USCIS) liaison, and Customs & Border Protection (CBP) liaison. On a national level, Atessa served on AILA’s USCIS Headquarters and Benefits, Administrative Appeals Office (AAO), and Department of Labor (DOL) liaison committee. In addition, Atessa has served on AILA’s Business Immigration Advocacy, Issues, and Due Process & Civil Liberties committees, as well as several conference committees. She has served as a board member of the Iranian American Bar Association Northern California chapter since 2009 and is incoming President of the chapter. She is a member of the Bar Association of San Francisco, and the National Lawyers Guild. She has authored several articles published in AILA Handbooks. Atessa has presented at national and regional AILA conferences. Atessa has been highly reviewed in legal directories, including selection as a Northern California “Super Lawyer” (2010-2012), and listing in the International Who’s Who of Corporate Immigration Lawyers (2011-2015).

Sang Kim

Sang joined Jackson and Hertogs as a Senior Associate in December 2015. He possesses over a decade of experience in immigration, nationality and global business law. Sang has guided corporate, entrepreneur and investor clients in all aspects of temporary and permanent visa, travel and employment matters. He has also represented hundreds of scientists, performers, executives and extraordinary individuals in the field on their personal immigration petitions. Previously, Sang was a former Congressional Staff member to then, U.S. Senator and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Admitted to the New York State Bar since 2005, he is a graduate of New York University and Brooklyn Law School and is a current and active member of AILA.