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Health See other Health Articles Title: Bacteria for piglets and Chinese infants spur Li Ka-shing’s gut instinct to put his money behind this US biomedical firm Pharmaceuticals Bacteria for piglets and Chinese infants spur Li Ka-shings gut instinct to put his money behind this US biomedical firm Infants increasingly lack beneficial gut bacteria due to Caesareans, formula feeding, antibiotics Piglets have a hard start in life, and trial will get under way in China to see if product can toughen them up SCMP... Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shings philanthropy arm has invested in a California company that makes products to improve childrens health. A company backed by Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing has reintroduced a missing beneficial gut bacteria to more than 10,000 American babies. Now it is eyeing Chinas babies and piglets. Evolve BioSystems, a California probiotics products developer, is in talks with Zhejiang University to conduct clinical trials on more than 4,000 pigs this year in the province to improve stock survival rates and cure gut diseases in piglets, said chief executive Timothy Brown. Chinas quest for the cutting edge in surgical robotics It is also seeking to reintroduce the Bifidobacterium longum bacteria to Chinese infants guts through a powder mixed with liquid. It is in talks with potential partners to develop sales in mainland China, and aims to introduce its product in Hong Kong in a few months at Queen Mary Hospitals neo-natal intensive care unit to establish credibility and pave the way for a mass market launch. The vast majority of babies born in developed nations and increasingly in developing nations like China and Brazil are missing the bacteria, due to rising Caesarean deliveries, formula feeding and antibiotics usage, said Evolve chief chairman and chief scientific officer David Kyle. Killer infection at Hong Kong's doorstep as city fights superbug war The push comes as Beijing tries to reduce the use of antibiotics in the food industry that contributes to the proliferation of antibiotics-resistant diseases in humans. Some 84,000 tonnes of antibiotics are fed to animals annually in China, much of it to pigs. China is the worlds largest pork producer. Some of the antibiotics leak from farms into the water tables, contaminating peoples water supply. Prolonged exposure to low levels of antibiotics facilitates bacteria to learn ways to become antibiotics-resistant through mutation, said Brown, making it harder to treat some diseases and contributing to the so-called superbugs phenomenon. We could [feed] this [to] pigs [to strengthen their immune system] and it would help them through those first difficult, unstable days of life
when they are often subject to infection in their gut, Brown told the South China Morning Post. This is an area of particular interest to Li Ka Shing Foundation and to China because it could potentially replace the use of antibiotics. China is making better, cheaper drugs and its reasons may surprise you Pilot studies have found that pigs with the intervention have survival rates 3 percentage points to 4 percentage points higher than those without, as well as being 5 to 15 per cent heavier, Brown noted. Evolve, in which charitable organisation Li Ka Shing Foundations Horizons Ventures is the largest shareholder, also wants to get its product into the mainland Chinese and Hong Kong baby markets. [David Kyle, chairman and chief scientific officer, California-based probiotics products developer Evolve BioSystems. Photo: Handout] Without breast milk, infants do not have important nutrients and beneficial bacteria in their guts. Natural birth also helps infants pick up the bacteria, which can dominate the gut and crowd out other bacteria that carry antibiotics-resistant genes. The missing bacteria was first identified by faculty at the University of California at Davis, from which Evolve spun off in 2012. The Davis faculty helped the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation develop vaccines for babies in Bangladesh. They found large amounts of the bacteria in their stool, unlike in US infants. The founder of software giant Microsoft took part in Evolves latest US$40 million financing round last summer. Evolves probiotic product, when mixed with breast milk and fed to infants, also improves babies sleep pattern, reduces crying caused by gastrointestinal discomfort, and reduces diaper usage due to diarrhoea, Kyle said, citing customers feedback. He also believes it may be able to reduce incidents of autoimmune disorders such as food allergies, asthma, eczema and type 1 diabetes. Trials are under way that will determine in a few years whether this contention is scientifically valid. The product costs US$75 to US$80 a month in the US and infants need it for six months. No additional regulatory hurdle is required to export it to Hong Kong from the US, where it is sold as food for special dietary use subject to safety tests. The company, which currently sources sales solely from the US market, aims to become profitable next year, Brown said. After having raised US$70 million of private funding, it is actively exploring options for a potential initial public offering both in the US and Hong Kong markets, he added. This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: U.S. firm eyes gut bugs in China babies and pigs Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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