Spin-outs from MRC-funded research attract £10bn in investments

New report shows how the Medical Research Council (MRC) is boosting UK jobs and economic growth.

Research funded by MRC has led to spin-out companies with an economic value of greater than £6.1 billion. This has created more than 3,800 jobs and attracted £10.2 billion of external investment, according to new analysis published today.

Independent evaluation

The report was conducted by independent evaluator Ipsos UK. It was commissioned to establish an overview of the investment and growth outcomes achieved by spin-outs that have been linked to intellectual property developed with MRC’s funding.

Commercialising technologies linked to MRC-funded research

Ipsos UK collected an initial dataset that included details of companies established to commercialise technologies linked to MRC-funded research from 2008 to 2023.

One hundred and forty-six were linked to MRC’s translationally targeted research funding, established to speed up the transfer of research ideas into new interventions, and 195 to other MRC-funded research.

Billions in private sector investment

The report looked at the 206 spin-outs for which there was Pitchbook data. These companies accounted for around 34% of the total capital raised by spin-outs in the wider UK pharmaceutical and biotechnology sector founded between 2008 and 2023.

Collectively, £5.7 billion was secured in equity investment by those 206 companies, with 22 companies each attracting more than £50 million in investment. More than half (54%) established some level of external capital investment.

Leading the way with gene and cell therapies

The companies attracting the highest levels of investment were all active in the advanced therapies space. This included companies seeking to develop and commercialise gene and cell therapies, as well as other types of novel treatments, such as peptide-based therapeutics.

Most spin-outs were seeking to develop new therapeutics. This high-risk process requires significant volumes of capital to bring a product to market, and most companies do not generate revenues before being acquired by a larger pharmaceutical firm.

However, there were also a number of revenue-generating spin-outs that made significant economic contributions by commercialising diagnostic services and products. This included Perspectum, a developer of digital healthcare technologies, and NorthWest eHealth providing services to support the design and delivery of clinical trials.

Success of MRC’s translational strategy

The report’s findings indicate that spin-outs arising from MRC’s translationally targeted research funding have been highly successful. They have leveraged £5.30 of external investment from every £1 invested, by raising approximately £3.1 billion of external equity investment between 2008 and 2023, relative to £577 million in research funding committed.

These spin-outs also attract more external funding in total, and on average raise greater levels of funding, than those associated with all other MRC-funded research.

MRC accelerating research from discovery to prosperity

Professor Patrick Chinnery, Executive Chair of MRC, said:

MRC-funded research has led to the creation of a significant number of impactful spin-out companies.

Our funding has given rise to innovative medical treatments and technologies that underpin valuable intellectual property and new companies, collectively worth billions of pounds, targeted on improving the lives of people with diseases.

MRC’s ongoing strategic support for translational research is proving highly successful. We are progressing research from bench to bedside, from discovery to prosperity – supporting a healthier economy, as well as a healthier population.

Billions of pounds of impact from legacy spin-outs

The report also examined spin-outs associated with research funded prior to 2008. Although sources for these are less comprehensive, it revealed the spin-outs have attracted £4.5 billion in investment, with a handful of leading companies achieving globally significant commercialisation outcomes.

For example, Cambridge Antibody Technology was responsible for intellectual property that resulted in some of the best-selling drugs over the last two decades and £214 billion in global sales.

Although only recently receiving market authorisation, sales of immunotherapies and T-cell therapies developed by Adaptimmune are projected to generate up to $400 million annually. In 2023, the company earned $150 million in collaboration revenue to develop up to five new therapies for cancer.