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Active RESEARCH CENTERS NIH (US)

The Consortium for Technology & Innovation in Pediatrics: CTIP 3.0

$11.5M USD

Funder FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Recipient Organization Lurie Children'S Hospital of Chicago
Country United States
Start Date Sep 01, 2023
End Date Aug 31, 2028
Duration 1,826 days
Number of Grantees 3
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10817563
Grant Description

Project Summary The Consortium for Technology & Innovation in Pediatrics (CTIP 3.0) is a pediatric medical device consortium based at Lurie Children’s Hospital (LCH) and Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) established in 2011 and funded by the FDA in 2013 and 2018. CTIP facilitates the development and commercialization of pediatric

medical devices by simultaneously engaging and coordinating clinicians, engineers, regulators, hospital administrators, industry, patients, and the business community to guide and support medical device development for children. For portfolio companies, CTIP fosters networking opportunities, clinical partnerships,

research and evidence generation, and direct and indirect financial support and expert guidance on issues related, but not limited to, intellectual property, prototyping, engineering, testing, grant writing, business development, regulatory strategy, and clinical trial design. CTIP has established a network of children’s

hospitals, academic institutions, accelerators, incubators, and ecosystem partners to support the commercialization of pediatric medical devices. Over the past ten years, CTIP has expanded from southern California, to the entire west coast, and now to a national consortium with academic and industry partners in

California, Oregon, Washington, Illinois, Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, and Wisconsin. CTIP’s overarching goals are: 1) Accelerate pediatric MedTech forward, no matter how small or large the step, through non-dilutive funding and comprehensive wrap-around services at every stage of the total product life cycle; 2) Connect

pediatric medical device innovators to our national network of experts and multidisciplinary stakeholders to foster research, clinical, and business partnerships; and 3) Advocate for pediatric health equity and champion pediatric-specific innovation through research, publications, public events, education, and collaborations. The

systematic barriers to pediatric device innovation are too complex for any one entity to address, so we have worked tirelessly to be effective partners to the other PDCs, the FDA, healthcare organizations, investors, and other ecosystem partners. By coordinating with larger organizations, we multiply our efforts and reach in the

field of pediatric medical devices. For the next funding cycle, CTIP plans to continue to deliver excellent support to all of our portfolio members, and expand our activities in four key areas: 1) business development and follow-on funding opportunities to ensure our companies have the financial runway they need to bring their

devices to market; 2) growing our robust pediatric medical device clinical trials infrastructure and services; 3) engaging patients and families intentionally as partners in device development and advocacy; and 4) addressing founders’ critical knowledge gaps in healthcare informatics, including data integration,

interoperability, cybersecurity, and EHR workflows. These new activities will help CTIP continue to build a sustainable, needs-driven pipeline of new pediatric medical devices, with the ultimate goal of having more and better devices available on the market that are designed to specifically meet the health needs of children.

All Grantees

Lurie Children'S Hospital of Chicago

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