Young researcher developing ‘Squish’ treatment for strawberry birthmarks supported by KiwiNet Emerging Innovator Fund
HAMILTON, NZ – 9 December, 2016 – Final year PhD student Sean Mackay from the University of Otago has received a $25,000 grant to aid the development
of ‘Squish’, a targeted treatment for strawberry birthmarks which affects approximately 1 in 10 infants. The grant from
the KiwiNet Emerging Innovator Fund is one of ten to help researchers take clever ideas and work with business to take
to market. It was made possible by a donation from the Norman F. B. Barry Foundation.
Mackay is part of a team of talented scientists and clinicians from the University of Otago, the Gillies McIndoe
Research Institute, and the Centre for the Study & Treatment of Vascular Birthmarks based at Hutt Hospital in Wellington. They are working on a targeted drug delivery
system to treat strawberry birthmarks, also known as infantile haemangioma.
25 year old Mackay, originally from the Kapiti Coast, says strawberry birthmarks are a type of vascular tumor. They are
disfiguring, can affect bodily functions and are sometimes life-threatening.
“The goal is to develop a more effective and safer approach to treating infants by delivering the drug directly into the
tumours using nanotechnology to carry the drug directly through the skin, rather than administering it orally. We are
literally trying to ‘Squish’ drugs through the skin, hence the name for the technology,” he says.
Dr Eng Tan, from Otago University’s Chemistry Department, the lead researcher on the project says, “Current treatment
for this debilitating disorder is Propranolol, a beta-blocker, taken orally, but it can cause adverse side effects.
Creams that go on the skin are also not effective as they don’t penetrate the cells effectively to enable drug delivery
as required.”
Mackay says it’s fantastic to be awarded the KiwiNet Emerging Innovator Funding as it will be used to optimise the
technology for stability, and increase its ability to effectively transport drugs into the tumour.
Dr James Hutchinson, CEO of KiwiNet says, “The commercialisation of this approach offers hope for the millions of
children born with strawberry birthmarks every year. Patients are likely to experience fewer side effects while
enhancing the efficiency of the drug therapy if they could be treated this way. KiwiNet is all about unlocking the
innovative potential of our science for the benefit of New Zealanders, so we are thrilled to be able to support Sean on
his journey to commercial success through our Emerging Innovator Fund.”
Mackay completed his undergraduate degree in chemistry in 2012. He then worked as a research assistant developing
targeted drug delivery systems for the treatment of neurological disorders such as epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease.
In 2013 he received a doctoral scholarship to pursue a PhD in the area of nanoscale and biomedical technologies in the
Chemistry Department. Mackay specialises in nanotechnology, where his main research interest is in developing innovative
medical technologies which control the way that drugs are administered to patients, making them more effective with
fewer side-effects.
To date these have ranged from nanoparticles which can be remotely activated to release neurochemicals or
neurochemical-like drugs in the brain to treat neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and Epilepsy to
wound-healing hydrogels.
John Smith, Chairman of the Norman F. B. Barry Foundation says, “We’re delighted to be able to support Sean and this
very important project that could have widespread benefit to children around the world. We’re delighted to see our
$250,000 donation making such an important difference to a wide range of amazing research projects with real commercial
potential.”
The KiwiNet Emerging Innovator Fund, established thanks to the generous support of the Norman F. B. Barry Foundation, is
available to early career researchers based at universities and Crown Research Institutes across New Zealand who
demonstrate a clever new idea and a willingness to work closely with industry as they develop a prototype. Recipients
also receive expert legal advice from KiwiNet (www.kiwinet.org.nz) corporate partners, MinterEllisonRuddWatts and IP advice from Baldwins.
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