It was a full and busy week for life sciences news in San Diego, with interesting advances in wireless health and a variety of deals. I’m planning at least one more report from the Wireless Health 2011 Conference, but in the meantime, here’s everything else.
North Carolina Gov. Beverly Burdue said yesterday that San Diego-based Sequenom (NASDAQ: [[ticker:SQNM]]) plans to build an $18.7 million molecular diagnostics clinical laboratory in the Research Triangle Park. Tar Heels state officials offered the diagnostics company as much as $2.3 million in incentives if Sequenom can meet certain hiring and investment goals. Sequenom, which currently has more than 280 employees in San Diego, would nearly double in size, as the North Carolina lab is expected to create 242 jobs over the next five years. Sequenom has been working to commercialize its noninvasive test for Down syndrome, which identifies a fetal marker for the condition that circulates in the maternal bloodstream.
—The Wireless Health 2011 Conference, a scientific and technical symposium, continues through today at the Hilton La Jolla Torrey Pines. In a keynote presentation earlier this week, Qualcomm (NASDAQ: [[ticker:QCOM]]) CEO Paul Jacobs demonstrated a mobile app developed by San Francisco-based AliveCor that turns an iPhone into an electrocardiograph device. “The future is already here,” Jacobs said, quoting the sci-fi writer William Gibson. “It’s just not very equally distributed.” AliveCor raised $3 million in first round venture funding earlier this year from Qualcomm Ventures, Burrill & Co., and the Oklahoma Life Sciences Fund.
—The price of shares in San Diego-based Illumina plunged by 32 percent after the company posted disappointing third quarter sales of $235 million, about $40 million short of expectations. Illumina, the market leader in high-speed gene sequencing instruments, also withdrew its 2011 sales forecast “due to the many market uncertainties.” Illumina’s stock, which had been trading around $40 a share, fell to $27.08 on the news last week. Illumina (NASDAQ: [[ticker:ILMN]]) shares closed yesterday at $26.04.
—I sat down with the chairman and CEO of PatientSafe Solutions, Jim Sweeney, who talked about the wireless healthcare company’s PatientTouch device, a souped-up Apple iPod Touch that’s been extensively modified to help