A British biotech company founded by a Nobel prize winner has raised what it says is a record £691,000 via crowdfunding to help launch a stem cell-based regenerative medicine for use following heart trauma.
Cell Therapy, which is based in the Welsh capital Cardiff, says the medicine has the potential to reduce scarring of the heart muscle caused by a heart attack or failure.
Chief executive Ajan Reginald, who was previously at Roche, said crowd funding was a quick way to raise money for final stage trials or commercial launches.
"It was very fast and very efficient," he said. "We have spent five per cent of our time on fundraising, which enables me to spend 95 per cent of my time on the business."
The company's founder Martin Evans shared the 2007 Nobel Prize for medicine for groundbreaking stem cell research.
Cell Therapy used website Crowdcube to raise nearly three times its original target from more than 300 investors.
Mr Reginald said the backers included investment bankers, hedge fund employees and scientists.
"Crowd funding allows investors to look in detail at a company in their own time," he said, adding that some 10,000 investors had seen the pitch.
The company plans to publish data from clinical trials of the drug, called Heartcel, next month, before final stage trials with a view to a launch in 2016.
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