Cardio3BioSciences raises €3.1M in non-dilutive funding

The Belgian biotechnology company, Cardio3BioSciences, a leader in the discovery and development of regenerative and protective therapies for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases, today announces it has secured a total of €3.1 million in non-dilutive funding from the Walloon Region and the European Commission's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).

The Walloon Region funding takes the form of recoverable cash advances and will be used to industrialise a number of Cardio3 BioSciences projects including establishing a new bioreactor for the production of the Company's lead product, C3BS-CQR-1 (C-Cure®), a highly innovative stem cell approach for the treatment of heart failure. The funding also supports Cardio3 BioSciences' protein therapeutic programme which is aimed at the treatment of myocardial infarction (heart attack) and the regulatory approval of its advanced medical device, C-Cath®.C-Cath is a proprietary catheter designed to maximize the delivery efficiency of regenerative therapeutics to the heart.

The FP7 funding was awarded to Cardio3 BioSciences as part of a €5.9 millionaward from the European Commission to a Collaborative Research Consortium, BAMI (Bone marrow-derived mononuclear cellsfor Acute Myocard Infarct) of which Cardio3 BioSciences is a part.BAMIinvolves 21 partners in 11 European countries and is conducting the largest trial of adult stem cell therapy the treatment of heart attack patients.

Dr Christian Homsy, CEO of Cardio3 BioSciences comments on today's announcement: "We very much welcome the continued strong support of the Walloon region and this new funding from the European Commission which will help drive a number of projects within the company as we apply our technologies to address a range of cardiac diseases. The Walloon region has played a significant role through the history of Cardio3 BioSciences helping to bring us to the point where our core revolutionary technology, C-Cure, for the treatment of heart failure, has passed through successful completion of its Phase II clinical development stage and is expected to enter Phase III in 2012."

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