Scioto Biosciences Closes $1.8M in Series A Financing

Receives NIH and State of Indiana Grants Funding to Support Launch of New Microbiome Platform Technology

Scioto Biosciences, a preclinical stage company developing innovative therapies to transform the delivery of microbiome therapeutics, today announced it has closed on $1.8M in Series A financing to support the launch of its new microbiome platform technology.

The funding represents a first-time interstate collaboration between two Indiana-based investors, BioCrossroads and Elevate Ventures, together with Ohio-based Rev1 Ventures, and follows a $330,000 Small Business Technology Transfer grant from the National Institute of Health (NIH) along with a $50,000 match from the State of Indiana.

“We are delighted that a team of important investors has shown confidence in our microbiome platform technology and sees its commercialization potential,” said Joe Trebley, CEO, Scioto Biosciences. “Our strong IP portfolio, executive and scientific team and working relationships with organizations like the Research Institute of the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio has put us in a strong position to meet clinical needs in multiple therapeutic markets.”

Scioto Biosciences was founded in May 2017 when Nationwide Children’s Hospital licensed the microbiome platform technology to the company. Scioto’s novel technology will enhance the already promising microbiome field, which has attracted roughly $1.8B in venture capital funding since 2010.

One noteworthy solution Scioto Biosciences offers with its microbiome platform is combatting a serious condition impacting premature infants. Up to 10% of infants born under 3.3 pounds can develop necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), and mortality rates can be as high as 30%. Despite decades of research and treatment, preventive approaches for NEC have remained suboptimal. NEC is now the leading cause of death from gastrointestinal disease in premature infants with an associated cost of $500 million to $1 billion annually for treatment in the United States alone. Novel treatment approaches are critically needed, and Scioto Biosciences has the potential to become the standard of preventative care for this condition.

“As someone who routinely sees the devastating impact of NEC, working with the Scioto team to develop a groundbreaking preventative, probiotics-based solution is truly exciting and gives me hope,” said Gail Besner, Chief of Pediatric Surgery at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, co-inventor and co-founder of Scioto Biosciences.

“Working together with Scioto and studying the development of our microbiome platform, you can really see the potential for not only helping prevent NEC, but also tackling other disease states in both human and animal health,” said Steve Goodman, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and also co-inventor and co-founder of Scioto. “This could change the delivery system of many developing microbiome treatments and help advance a rapidly-growing field.”

About Scioto Biosciences

Based in Indianapolis, Indiana, Scioto Biosciences is a preclinical stage company developing innovative therapies devoted to having a transformative impact on the delivery of microbiome therapeutics. The Scioto Platform has the potential to enhance efficacy wherever probiotics are used such as diabetes, neurological disorders, gastrointestinal health, alternatives to in-feed antibiotics (in livestock) and others. For more information, visit http://sciotobiosciences.com/.