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Award Data
The Award database is continually updated throughout the year. As a result, data for FY24 is not expected to be complete until March, 2025.
Download all SBIR.gov award data either with award abstracts (290MB)
or without award abstracts (65MB).
A data dictionary and additional information is located on the Data Resource Page. Files are refreshed monthly.
The SBIR.gov award data files now contain the required fields to calculate award timeliness for individual awards or for an agency or branch. Additional information on calculating award timeliness is available on the Data Resource Page.
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rAAV5-hCNGB3 Gene Therapy for Achromatopsia: Safety and Efficacy in a Dog Model
SBC: APPLIED GENETIC TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Topic: NDESCRIPTION provided by applicant Complete achromatopsia is an autosomal recessive inherited congenital disorder of retinal cone photoreceptors Patients with complete achromatopsia experience extreme light sensitivity and daytime blindness and best visual acuity under non bright light conditions is usually or worse and generally stable over time In addition to poor acuity hypersensit ...
STTR Phase I 2013 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
HealthCare Manager: A Remote Medication and Personal Health Plan Support System
SBC: ABLELINK TECHNOLOGIES INC Topic: NIADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): As the well known baby boomer generation surges toward retirement age, the issue becomes more significant each day of how this generation of 78 million seniors will be able to remain as independent as possible while increasingly burdened by the onset of multiple, chronic, medical conditions and a decline in cognitive abilities. Concurrent with the dramatic incr ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Energy Efficient Oxygen Concentrator
SBC: ADVANCED MEDICAL ELECTRONICS CORP Topic: NHLBIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Project Summary/Abstract This project will improve the energy efficiency of home oxygen concentrators for patients on long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) and save energy costs for the patients. The number of patients on LTOT is estimated to be 1.2 million. The cost of electricity can vary from one region, to another so it is difficult to determine the exact monthly ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Multimicrophone Adaptive Array Augmented with Visual Cueing
SBC: ADVANCED MEDICAL ELECTRONICS CORP Topic: NIDCDDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Advanced Medical Electronics Corporation (AME) proposes to develop a smartphone-based adaptive audiovisual array that enables hearing aid users to converse with multiple speakers in reverberant environments with significant speech babble noise where their hearing aids do not function well. The array will consist of a smartphone, a smartphone accessory, and a sm ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Face Recognition Tool for the Blind
SBC: ADVANCED MEDICAL ELECTRONICS CORP Topic: NEIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): It is difficult for people who are blind or have low vision to recognize people in a variety of social interactions. Sole reliance on voice recognition may be difficult in some circumstances, and impossible in other circumstances, e.g., people within a group who do not speak. The inability to identify people during group meetings is a disadvantage for blind peo ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Nucleic acid delivery of growth factors and heparan sulfate proteoglycans for enh
SBC: International Medicine and Biomedical Research Topic: NIAMSDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): In chronic wounds, numerous factors contribute to the diminished healing. Wound healing constituents, including heparan sulfate proteoglycans and numerous growth factors, are essential to normal skin wound healing. Several key growth factors such as FGF, VEGF, and PDGF require heparan sulfate-like polymers as co- receptors or co-activators for growth factor act ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
AMES+Brain Stimulation: Treatment for Profound Plegia in Stroke
SBC: AMES TECHNOLOGY, INC. Topic: NINDSDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): An estimated 30% of chronic stroke patients with motor disabilities of the limbs are plegic in the hand or the foot - that is, they cannot move the hand or foot. While some plegic stroke patients have completely paralyzed muscles, without the ability to activate even minimally the plegic muscles ( profound plegia ), other plegic stroke patients are capable of p ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Augmented Reality Simulation for Teaching Medical Students
SBC: ARCHIE MD INC. Topic: NCRRDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The majority of medical procedural skills are learned during medical school and residency training. However, the amount of time and access students have to learn these skills is declining. Medical students have improved clinical performance when they have direct interaction with patients, yet as medical school class sizes increase, students have less access to ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
INTERACTIVE INFORMED CONSENT FOR PEDI
SBC: ARCHIE MD INC. Topic: NHLBINot Available
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
A Novel Expansion of Primary Leukemia Stem Cells
SBC: Arteriocyte, Inc. Topic: NCIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Arteriocyte's long-term objective is to develop a platform for ex vivo expansion of leukemic stem cell (LSC) based on cytokine-enriched medium and the company's proprietary nanofiber culture scaffold (NANEX). Cancer stem cell research is of significant importance because, this approach has the potential to create an effective therapy that overcomes challenges o ...
SBIR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health