By
Stephen T. Watson | News Staff
Reporter |Buffalo News
on
January 29, 2016 - 9:03 AM
A
group of Buffalo-based investors has put $1 million into a startup company in
Florida that is creating novel medical products made from the skin of a Mexican
salamander known for the ability to regenerate lost limbs and other body parts.
The
products in development by NeXtGen Biologics show promise in the field of
post-surgery wound treatment and the initial approval from federal regulators
could come by the end of this year, said Mark Hamister, chairman and CEO of the
Hamister Group.
“We
think this product will eventually replace surgical mesh,” he said.
Hamister
is one of the founders of Buffalo Capital, formed to bring investment
opportunities to the attention of its members. Scott E. Friedman, an attorney
who is chairman and CEO of the Lippes Mathias Wexler Friedman law firm,
typically identifies the potential investments, Hamister said.
In
addition to Hamister and Friedman, the investors include: Jerry Jacobs Jr.,
co-CEO of Delaware North; Dr. Elad Levy, a neurosurgeon; Brian J. Lipke, former
chairman of Gibraltar Industries; Buffalo attorney Gerald Lippes; and Ted Pierce,
a Florida-based investor whose family owned the former Niagara Envelope Co.
Friedman
initially was contacted about NeXtGen. The company explores uses for medical
products made from the skin of the Mexican
axolotl – pronounced ACK-suh-LAH-tuhl – salamander. It was formed in
Gainesville, Fla., in April 2014 by CEO Jonelle Toothman and Jamie Grooms, and
relies on the work of researcher Ryanne Early, according to the Gainesville
Sun.
The
company is working on a soft-tissue-healing mesh, based on the skin of the
axolotl, which can regenerate its skin and limbs. The mesh would be used in
surgeries such as abdominal and hernia repair, dermal replacement or a heart
graft, the newspaper reported.
NeXtGen
outsources the raising and harvesting of the salamanders to the University of
Kentucky, according to Hamister and the Sun.
Hamister
said the group was drawn to NeXtGen and its products because this was an area
without a lot of competition, it was a product that filled a real need, it
could improve people’s lives, it had enormous potential for growth and it could
provide a high return on their investment.
“We
thought the product was extremely novel,” he said.
The
members invested with NeXtGen directly and not through Buffalo Capital, he
said.
They
provided $1 million of the $1.28 million raised in this round, the third round
of fundraising brought in by NeXtGen since the startup’s founding. NeXtGen has
raised just under $3 million in all, Hamister said.
In
addition to their investment, Hamister and Levy took seats on the board of the
company.
If
all goes well, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration could approve the first
NeXtGen products for use in humans by the end of this year, and the first
products could be available for commercial use by the first half of 2017,
Hamister said.
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