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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Biotech firm behind eye injury treatment raises £1.1m investment

NuVision wound dressings are made with the sac that surrounds babies in the womb and aid regeneration of the eye’s surface

(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

A Nottingham company behind a product that helps eye heal quicker has raised a further £1.1 million investment.

NuVision said the latest funding round brings the total raised by the company to over £5 million. The business was founded in 2015 by Dr Andy Hopkinson based on his research at the University of Nottingham. Its wound dressings are made using amniotic membrane – the sac that surrounds babies in the womb – and aid the regeneration and healing of the eye’s surface.

Its first product, Omnigen, is already approved for treatment on the NHS and is used in hospitals and private clinics in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and overseas. It can be applied in the operating theatre or, when used in combination with the company’s bespoke bandage contact lens, OmniLenz, in the outpatient department or clinic.

One of the benefits is Omnigen is a dry product which is stable at room temperature and rehydrates on contact with natural moisture from the eye.

The business has raised the cash from existing investors including the MEIF Proof of Concept & Early Stage Fund –managed by Mercia and part of the Midlands Engine Investment Fund – Mercia’s EIS funds, Pioneer Group (formerly the BioCity Group), the University of Nottingham and private investors.

It will enable NuVision to accelerate the development of its first two products in advance of a Series A investment in the next 12 months.

Chief executive Andy Hill said: “We are delighted to receive further support from our existing investors.

“This investment round is an endorsement of our innovative new therapies for ocular care and our commitment to developing rapid and accessible treatment for ocular injury.