Indiana life sciences companies capture more venture capital money in first half of 2010

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Venture dollars for Indiana life sciences companies are still few, but the flow of deals is picking up.

Nine Hoosier companies scored investments totaling $10.4 million during the first six months of the year, according to IBJ
research and data from Cleveland-based BioEnterprise, a life sciences business development group.

During the same period a year ago, just four companies secured venture capital, for a total of $8.9 million.

Indiana’s total dollars ranked it a lowly ninth out of 11 Midwestern states tracked by BioEnterprise. But its number
of deals ranked second, behind only Ohio.

The trend of smaller deals has been consistent across the Midwest for the past 18 months. For example, five Indiana companies
attracted investments of $750,000 or less. The smallest deal was Warsaw-based OrthoPediatrics’ funding of $50,000.

“The number of companies attracting financing remains higher. This is primarily due to increasing seed and angel-stage
activity across the Midwest,” said Baiju R. Shah, CEO of BioEnterprise, in a statement.

Through the end of June, total venture capital invested in Midwestern life sciences companies was $412 million, up 2 percent
from the same period a year ago but down 44 percent from three years ago.

Indiana’s venture haul is down more than 80 percent this year compared with the same date three years ago.

There were 75 Midwestern deals during the first half of the year, down slightly from 81 a year ago but still higher than
in 2007.

Indiana had twice as many deals this year than at the same time in 2007. The companies scoring investments included Indianapolis-based
Fast Diagnostics, with $2.75 million; Indianapolis-based FlowCo, with $2 million; and Indianapolis-based PolicyStat, with
$1.15 million.

Outside of Indianapolis, West Lafayette-based QuadraSpec pulled in $2.33 million. The company has since changed its name
to Perfinity Biosciences Inc.

BioEnterprise credited Indiana with $9.2 million raised by CoLucid Pharmaceuticals. The drug discovery firm started in Indianapolis,
studying a drug bought from Eli Lilly and Co. But it now makes its headquarters in North Carolina’s Research Triangle
Park. Therefore, IBJ excluded those dollars from its calculations.

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