Corporate News

HKU to Collaborate on Biomedical Innovation with Institut Pasteur and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation

21 Jun 2018

The University of Hong Kong, Institut Pasteur and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation signed a Memorandum of Understanding in Paris today (June 21, 2018) to set up a joint biomedical research centre, witnessed by a high-level delegation led by The Hon Mrs Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. (Photos credits: © Institut Pasteur, François Gardy)

The University of Hong Kong, Institut Pasteur and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation signed a Memorandum of Understanding in Paris today (June 21, 2018) to set up a joint biomedical research centre, witnessed by a high-level delegation led by The Hon Mrs Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. (Photos credits: © Institut Pasteur, François Gardy)

 

(Hong Kong, 21 June 2018) - The University of Hong Kong (“HKU”), Institut Pasteur (“IP”) and Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (“HKSTP”) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (“MoU”) in Paris today (June 21, 2018) to set up a joint biomedical research centre, witnessed by a high-level delegation led by The Hon Mrs Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region; and Mr Nicholas W Yang, the Secretary for Innovation and Technology.

HKU, IP and HKSTP aim to establish an interdisciplinary research centre for immunology, infection and personalised medicine within the HKSTP’s healthcare technologies research cluster (“Health@Inno Cluster”), in response to the HKSAR Government’s initiative to turn Hong Kong into a centre of biomedical innovation and technology.

The Hon Mrs Carrie Lam, Chief Executive of the HKSAR, said: “Pooling together technology talent and attracting top scientific research institutions to Hong Kong are among the eight major areas I set out in my inaugural Policy Address to spearhead innovation and technology development in Hong Kong. I am pleased to witness today the signing of the MOU between HKU and IP, two world-renowned institutions in the area of medical research, to collaborate and set up a joint research centre in the Health@Inno Cluster to be established in the Hong Kong Science Park.”

Professor Gabriel Leung, HKU’s Dean of Medicine, said: “We live in an era of enormous opportunity – when it is possible for biomedical research to produce ‘moonshots’ that will have tremendous healthcare benefits for all of society. The staunch support of the Hong Kong Government means that this deepening of a longstanding relationship between IP and HKU will be able to further harness collaboration between East and West, across multiple disciplines and sectors, to advance the frontiers of biomedical technology in Hong Kong, the Greater Bay Area and beyond.”

Professor Stewart Cole, President of Institut Pasteur, extended a warm welcome to the Hong Kong delegation and expressed his delight at the establishment of the visionary research centre at Hong Kong Science Park: “IP and HKU have had a fruitful, decades-long partnership in advancing science, medicine and global public health initiatives, and we are now at a new and significant turning point. I am confident that the Pasteurian spirit and values will be manifested in the work we undertake together at the new research centre and that our discoveries will have far-reaching benefits for humankind.”

Mr Nicholas W Yang, the Secretary for Innovation and Technology of the HKSAR, said: “Healthcare research is certainly one area where Hong Kong has strength and potential in our pursuit of innovation and technology. In addition to its prospective economic contribution, it also has boundless potential to revolutionise disease prevention and treatment and to address challenges posed by ageing population.”

Hong Kong Science Park currently is home to about 100 international and local biomedical technology companies, a number that has nearly doubled since 2015. Healthcare technology is one of HKSTP’s focused innovation platforms and the Corporation will also host the Health@Inno research cluster announced by the Government in this year’s Budget. “The tripartite partnership of HKU, IP and HKSTP is important in this goal because it will create an open platform for multi-sectoral collaboration and facilitate the translation of biomedical innovations into commercial value and industrial impact. HKSTP has been playing a proactive role as a super connector facilitating collaboration among academia, research institutes and industry sectors across continents.” said Mr Albert Wong, Chief Executive Officer of HKSTP.

By combining the power of academia and industry, the tripartite partnership and research centre will contribute to Hong Kong’s transformation into an international innovation and technology hub of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Bay Area. Ultimately, its medical innovations are expected to advance the welfare of humanity.

 

More about the tripartite strategic partnership and the new research centre

The proposed new research centre will unite two world-class academic and research institutions, HKU and IP, to establish a unique platform at the Hong Kong Science Park that will deepen understanding of human health and disease and formulate innovative solutions for public health challenges. An example of the biomedical research being planned is an innovative interdisciplinary project in human immunology entitled The Healthy Human Global Project. This will provide a personalised patient management strategy to define immune “health”, taking into consideration population genetics, local endemic infections, diverse microbiota, and lifestyle and environmental factors; it will undoubtedly improve the effectiveness and efficiency of future public health initiatives. Other important pillars at the research centre, which will be equipped with state-of-the-art laboratories, are the creation of enabling platform technologies to enhance preparedness and response to emerging and re-emerging viruses, immune therapies for viral infections, and vaccine development.

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