”After years of research we suddenly realised how to combine our findings. It was a eureka moment.”

A new wound dressing that kills all types of bacteria without harming the body Even resistant bacteria

How antimicrobial hydrogel can revolutionize clinical treatments

Binds and kills 99.99% of bacteria without harming the body – even resistant bacteria

How antimicrobial hydrogel can revolutionize clinical treatments

Human care:

Amferia’s innovative, flexible hydrogel can be adapted to many medical applications. One of the first products we’re developing for our antimicrobial platform is a wound care dressing.

The soft, flexible Amferia antimicrobial hydrogel can be integrated with wound dressings of various shapes and sizes. The product we’re developing will be shelf-stable for up to eighteen months—and, when applied to wounds, will bind and kill bacteria for up to five days before dressings need to be changed.

Other potential treatments showing early promise include pre-surgery skin cleansing, spray-based products for wound care, and coatings for medical devices such as catheters and implants.

As antibiotics continue to be less effective against certain resistant bacterial strains, the potential market for this technology is enormous.

The potential market for this technology is enormous

Amferia’s hydrogel is a flexible solution that can be potentially adapted to multiple applications where killing bacteria is critical—with the added advantage that it kills even resistant bacteria. A few examples of potential applications are listed below. Some we are already developing. Others, we’re actively seeking partners to develop with us.

Read about the science behind Amferia >

Antimicrobial hydrogel wound dressing

Wound Care:

Amferia’s first product for human care is our antimicrobial hydrogel wound dressing. Amferia is developing several dressing formats that feature our patented hydrogel, starting with a non-adhesive hydrogel dressing for acute wounds, while pipeline products cater to the numerous needs within wound care while keeping the antimicrobial property intact.

When applied as a solid wound dressing pad, Amferia’s antimicrobial hydrogel can bind and kill 99.9% of bacteria, providing an effective, clean environment for wound recovery.  

The global advanced wound care market is estimated to be 7 billion USD today and growing at a rate of 5% annually.

Amferia’s proprietary hydrogel acts as the contact layer to the wound, binding and killing bacteria while providing a moist environment conducive for wound healing.

Today, Amferia has ongoing clinical investigations in Europe and we are seeking CE marking and FDA clearance on this product.

The global advanced wound care market is estimated to be 7 billion USD today and growing at a rate of 5% annually.

Antibacterial patches prior to surgery

Pre-surgery:

Another potential application for Amferia hydrogel comes in the form of a patch that can clear the skin of bacteria before a surgical procedure. A recent study we conducted on human skin demonstrated that Amferia hydrogel kills up to 99.99% bacteria on skin surface within the first three hours of application.

Adhering a protective hydrogel patch to the incision site prior to surgery eradicates skin flora, providing a bacteria free site of surgery. In emergency wards, where patients may be waiting in a non-sterile environment prior to surgery, a bacteria-killing patch can reduce complications and potentially save lives.

Sprays applied directly on wounds or skin

Antibacterial sprays:

The flexible nature of our hydrogel platform allows us to apply the patented bacteria-killing hydrogel in many forms—including an aerosol spray. Small particles of the antimicrobial hydrogel can be dispersed through an aerosol to cover broader areas of the skin and wounds. A pipeline product being developed at Amferia is a spray that can be applied directly to wounds or skin, especially deep wounds with high bacterial presence.

The spray system enables the same antimicrobial mode of action as the wound dressing while ensuring high surface area, which will enable eradication of bacteria from deep and uneven wounds.

This scientific basis for this product has been evaluated scientifically and published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Coated on medical devices like catheters

Antibacterial coatings:

Short-term implantable medical devices such as urinary catheters are widely used in hospitals and nursing homes to relieve urinary retention and incontinence.

In these types of medical devices, the most common and life-threatening complication is catheter associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI), which affect over 10 million patients every year with high economic cost and patient suffering. Antimicrobial resistance has made it difficult to treat CAUTI via conventional antibiotics.

With an increasingly ageing population and rising costs to treat CAUTIs, a strong need exists for innovative anti-bacterial catheters that prevent bacterial colonisation on the catheter walls.

In collaboration with Chalmers University of Technology, Amferia has begun ongoing research into enabling our technology as a whole catheter or as coatings to existing catheters. The base technology, amphiphilic antimicrobial hydrogel may be developed into tough silicone-like materials or can be tailored as coatings to silicone surfaces. Both these prospects are being tested today as proof-of-concepts and published in scientific articles.  

Get in touch for partnership, licensing and distribution

Partnership:

Amferia is interested to engage in discussions with companies who have business interest in utilising our innovation in possible product combinations through partnership structures. Within wound care, Amferia has the possibility to offer finished or semi-finished products for commercial or distribution partnerships.

Please contact: Saba Atefyekta, Sales Director and Co-founder

Read about our patents >


Wound dressing ready for production

Production:

Amferia is working in partnership with a manufacturer to produce a high volume of Amferia wound care dressings. Amferia currently operates a clinical production site in Mölndal, Sweden, for testing and evaluating these products. Informed by those results, we are building capacity for a high volume production of wound dressings with an established partner.  

Addressing antibiotic resistance the sustainable way

Antibiotic resistance:

Over time, harmful bacteria continue to evolve. In what is rapidly becoming a health care crisis, many bacteria have already developed antibiotic resistance (ABR). Simple infections such as skin wound infections can become lethal. Today, across the world, many types of bacteria have evolved to an extent where none of our antibiotics are effective against them.

For example, Methicillin Resistant Staph. Aureus (MRSA) evolved from an ordinary bacteria. It has become what’s known as a “superbug,” resistant to many common antibiotics. A skin infection involving MRSA can develop life-threatening complications. MRSA is only one of many superbug strains. At current rates of microbial evolution, WHO warns, drug-resistant infection may kill more people than cancer by 2050.  

Innovations such as Amferia’s focus on addressing antibiotic resistance through relying less on antibiotics and more on the roles of good hygiene, education on antibiotic use and smarter antimicrobial technologies that do not increase the risk of new resistance. 

Using bio-inspired materials derived from our immune system to kill bacteria comes with numerous advantages. These materials can target bacteria without harming our own cells. They offer potent local action at the site of an infection, with no leaching into the body or environment.

In this context, Amferia’s innovation and wound care dressing is more than a plaster, but rather a new platform that aids and supports the mitigation of antibiotic resistance. 

Top 100 research based innovations of 2021

May 26, 2021

Amferia’s technology recognized as one of the top 100 research based innovations of 2021 by the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences.

Amferia & Triolab announce partnership to launch innovative wound care products for animal health

May 6, 2021

The joint partnership with Triolab will enable Amferia to reach the large Swedish veterinary market where wound care and infection prevention is of prime importance, which has been intensified with the growing threat of antibiotic resistant infections. Amferia and Triolab’s partnership will build on extensive data and feedback from Amferia’s ongoing product trials across Europe. The joint efforts will aim to market the products to selective veterinary clinics across Sweden during 2021 and further expansion in 2022.

Amferia raises SEK 6.2 million in pre-seed investment

January 22, 2020

Almi Invest, Chalmers Ventures, along with the British investor Corithinan Properties Ltd. and Let’s Deal Founder Alexander Hars have invested a total of SEK 6.2 million in the Gothenburg-based med-tech company Amferia, who has developed a wound care product with a patented material that actively combats infections and kills antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

“Every year, 700,000 people die globally as a result of infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria and almost half of the infections begin with a simple wound on the skin. Amferia's wound care solution is a game-changer and will save lives”, says Louise Warme, Investment Manager at Almi Invest.

Amferia establishes R&D operations at AstraZeneca’s BioVentureHub

October 28, 2019

Amferia is very excited to move into the BioVentureHub, given the strong benefits of operating in a flourishing environment with state-of-the-art infrastructure dedicated to medtech and life science companies. We are also eager to be around so many experts within life science ranging from established to early-stage companies researching in biopharmaceuticals, medical devices and diagnostics. Amferia looks forward to be part of, learn and grow in this supportive and exciting community.

At the Annual Veterinary Hygiene Conference 2019

October 24, 2019

We had the pleasure to attend the annual Veterinary Hygiene Conference in Knivsta, Stockholm. One of the primary questions of this conference was about handling antibiotic resistant infections in animal wound care – a fast growing problem in Sweden and Globally. Many interesting & enlightening discussions with expert veterinary clinicians taught us a lot about the needs and challenges in animal wound care and how Amferia might expand its innovative solutions to help veterinary healthcare. Thanks for a great conference VVHF.

Amferia wins the Start-up of the Year award at Venture Cup Sweden 2019

September 20, 2019

The Jury's motivation for choosing Amferia as the winners! “With its disruptive solution, the team has the opportunity to shake several industries as they tackle one of humanity’s greatest global threats. By addressing a world problem, millions of lives will be saved. By changing the behavior of the consumer, there is also the potential to reform the market.”

Amferia receives the prestigious EU SME Instrument (Phase 1) grant from the European Union

August 1, 2019

Amferia receives the highly competitive and coveted EU SME Instrument Phase 1 grant of 50 000 Euros along with the valuable business network to take forward our technology into the market.

Amferia presents at Brilliant Minds conference 2019, Stockholm

June 15, 2019

Amferia was honoured to pitch as one of the ‘Next Brilliant in Tech‘ at Brilliant Minds 2019 held at Stockholm between 13-15 June. With esteemed guests like President Barack Obama, Secretary John Kerry, Greta Thunberg, the conference was an enlightening and inspiring event with much hope for the future.

The Recent UN Report on Antibiotic Resistance

May 3, 2019

The United Nations appointed Interagency Coordination Group on Antimicrobial Resistance (IACG) has presented its report on Recommendations to Combat Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR). It is clear from the report that AMR is a global and complex threat that needs to be addressed with extreme urgency and with care. Consistent, coordinated and conscious actions are demanded, especially from the World Goverments, Academia, Public, Healthcare-Industry and  Agriculture. A world where bacterial infections cannot be fought efficiently is a world of perils.

Here is an excerpt from the IACG report.

“The challenges of antimicrobial resistance are complex and multifaceted, but they are not insurmountable. Implementation of the recommendations in this report will help to save millions of lives, preserve antimicrobials for generations to come and secure the future from drug-resistant diseases.

But there is no time to wait.”

-IACG Report, April 29, 2019

Do take a minute and read the summary of this important report (English, pdf 653 kb)

Amferia featured in Göteborgs-Posten

February 8, 2019

New patch from Gothenburg kills bacteria in wounds. Read to know more

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