Healthtech startup CRIAM scores $2.1M funding

The firm plans to further develop its blood typing technology.
By Tammy Lovell
02:59 am
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Credit: CRIAM

Portugal-based startup CRIAM has raised $2.1 million (€1.86M) to further develop its blood typing technology.

The firm today announced it had closed a $1 million (€887,830) seed round led by SOSV, Artesian and the Portugal-based Social Impact Fund. Plus, it received a $1.12 million (€1 million) non-dilutive grant from the European Union's European Innovation Council (EIC).

WHAT IT DOES

CRIAM is a portable in vitro diagnostic company providing rapid analysis for blood-type, sub-type, diseases and nutrients. The device can be used in multiple scenarios, such as inside a moving emergency vehicle or at locations without internet or power.

The need to test blood type before a blood transfusion can lead to rushing patients to hospital for testing or using limited O negative stock. CRIAM has developed a solution for testing blood type in minutes.

The company has already performed successful clinical trials with Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) in the US, Hospital Santa Maria and Hospital de Braga in Portugal, and Birmingham Bio-Hub in the UK. It expects to obtain regulatory approval for its device in early 2023.

CRIAM is also using its platform to conduct R&D for infectious diseases detection, currently focusing on COVID-19 and malaria serological tests.

WHAT IT’S FOR

The funding will be used to further the development of CRIAM’s point-of-care blood typing and diseases diagnostic technology.

MARKET SNAPSHOT

The NHS recently announced it is launching the world’s largest trial of a blood test that can test for 50 types of cancer before symptoms appear. The Galleri test developed by health tech firm GRAIL, works by finding chemical changes in fragments of genetic code-cell-free DNA (cfDNA) that leak from tumours into the bloodstream.

Meanwhile, Israeli blood testing startup Sight Diagnostics has been collaborating with Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv to mitigate the risk of contamination by COVID-19. Sight’s OLO compact blood analyser is providing rapid complete blood count results in a dedicated lab.

Sight OLO has also been deployed at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS FT to allow full blood count testing for patients attending the emergency departments and support the validation of an AI triage system for COVID-19.

In 2018, blood testing firm Theranos was prosecuted for raising $700 million from investors through fraudulently claiming it had successfully developed a commercially-ready portable blood analyser that could perform a full range of laboratory tests from a small sample of blood.

ON THE RECORD

Vitor Crespo, CEO of CRIAM, said: "The lack of affordable and portable equipment for blood testing makes transfusions difficult in emergency scenarios, and results in dependency on O negative blood supply.”

Cyril Ebersweiler, general partner at SOSV and founder of SOSV's HAX Hard Tech programme, said: "CRIAM's solution is a game-changer for critical situations, and shows strong potential for the detection of various diseases and pandemics, which could unlock yet another gigantic market."

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