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Enterprise

Multi-million-pound revenue boost for medtech firm TrakCel following US contract wins

The Cardiff-based firm is looking to drive exports

TrakCel CEO Fiona Withey,


Medtech venture TrakCel has won a string of new clients in the US in deals that are expected to add millions to its revenues. Over the past 12 months, Cardiff-based TrakCel, a leading provider of digital supply chain tracking and management solutions for the cell and gene therapies sector, has secured contracts with four US-based biopharmaceutical companies.

The deals are for commercially approved cell and gene therapies for conditions such as sickle cell, B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, metastatic synovial sarcoma and recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa.

Following the contract wins, TrakCel is now the largest independent provider of cell orchestration solutions to the cell and gene therapy sector in the world, supporting more than 20 therapies globally.

The company’s primary success builds on a consistent upward trajectory of sales to America, with exports to the US having increased from 65% to 84% of its trade over the past five years. This growth has led to the firm opening a base in the US to provide localised sales and operational support.

The region now accounts for the vast majority of TrakCel’s global sales, which span 11 countries across North America, Europe, and Australia, with over 2,000 users across more than 250 authorised treatment centres (ATCs).

TrakCel aims to target further US expansion as it continues to support the rapidly evolving and fast-paced industry, with plans to increase exports to the market by 10% over the next 12 months. As the company continues to grow, it also hopes to create additional high-value job opportunities at its headquarters in Cardiff to strengthen Wales’ life sciences industry.

Established in 2012, TrakCel offers digital software to stakeholders within the cell and gene therapy supply chain to enable them to manage, control, and track the progress of samples obtained for clinical trials and commercial therapies. Its tracking software, Ocellos, is predominantly used to facilitate the treatment of life-saving cell and gene therapies within areas such as oncology and autoimmune disorders.

Its chief executive, Fiona Withey, said: “Breaking into the US market wasÂalways a key part of our strategy from the outset, given it is home to theÂworld’s largest pharmaceutical industry.