NIH Highlighted Topic: Accelerating Hidradenitis Suppurativa Research
Below is a brief summary. Please check the full solicitation before applying (link in resources section).
Executive Summary:
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is encouraging innovative research proposals focused on accelerating scientific understanding, diagnostics, predictive tools, and therapeutic development for Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS). This highlighted topic supports multidisciplinary research designed to better understand the molecular, immunological, genetic, microbial, hormonal, metabolic, and environmental mechanisms driving HS development, progression, and disease flares.
HS is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting between 1% and 4% of the population and is associated with significant comorbidities including obesity, metabolic syndrome, hypertension, anxiety, and depression. NIH is particularly interested in projects that improve understanding of HS endotypes, inflammatory pathways, microbiome interactions, immune dysregulation, and environmental triggers while advancing precision diagnostics and targeted treatment strategies.
Companies developing dermatology diagnostics, AI-enabled predictive models, biomarker platforms, wearable health technologies, imaging systems, immunology tools, microbiome analytics, digital health platforms, or novel therapeutic technologies may be strong candidates for funding.
Areas of interest include immune signaling pathways, cytokine dysregulation, microbiome and biofilm interactions, genetic and exposome analysis, predictive analytics, wearable monitoring systems, point-of-care diagnostics, New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), clinical trial readiness platforms, and innovative translational research models. NIH is also encouraging development of common data elements (CDEs), sex-specific analyses, and collaborative research frameworks that improve future clinical trial execution and patient outcomes.
Funding is available through the NIH SBIR/STTR Program, which currently provides up to approximately $323,090 for Phase I projects and up to $2,153,927 for Phase II projects, with opportunities for follow-on funding and commercialization support depending on project scope and translational impact.
This highlighted topic is supported by multiple NIH Institutes and Offices including the Office of Research on Women’s Health (ORWH), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), all of which are seeking transformative innovations that improve HS diagnosis, treatment, translational research, and patient quality of life.
How much funding would I receive?
Awards provide up to $323,090 for Phase I projects (up to 2 years) and $2,153,927 for Phase II projects (up to 3 years). Some topics approved by NIH may exceed these limits. Fast-Track and Phase IIB (follow-on) options allow continuous or extended funding beyond Phase II.
What could I use the funding for?
Funding may support the research, development, validation, and commercialization of diagnostics, biomarkers, predictive analytics platforms, therapeutics, digital health tools, and translational research technologies related to Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS).
Eligible activities may include:
AI and machine learning platforms for HS diagnosis and flare prediction
Biomarker discovery and precision dermatology technologies
Point-of-care diagnostics and wearable monitoring systems
Imaging and digital dermatology assessment platforms
Immunology and inflammatory pathway research technologies
Microbiome, biofilm, and exposome analysis systems
Computational biology and predictive modeling tools
Genetic and epigenetic analysis platforms for HS research
Digital health and remote patient monitoring technologies
New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), organoids, and in vitro disease models
Therapeutic target identification and translational drug development
Clinical trial readiness tools and common data element (CDE) development
Personalized medicine and sex-specific treatment approaches
Environmental exposure and toxicology research platforms
Omics analysis and systems biology technologies
Prototype development, translational studies, and clinical validation research
Commercialization planning, regulatory preparation, and manufacturing scale-up activities
Funding may also support personnel, laboratory testing, software engineering, AI model development, cloud infrastructure, bioinformatics analysis, preclinical studies, microbiome research, wearable integration, intellectual property protection, regulatory strategy, and commercialization activities necessary to advance a scalable and commercially viable dermatology or biotechnology solution aligned with NIH priorities.
Are there any additional benefits I would receive?
Beyond the formal funding award, awardees gain several strategic advantages:
Government Validation and Credibility:
Being selected for an NIH-backed SBIR grant signals technical excellence and alignment with national health and biomedical priorities. This validation builds investor and partner confidence.Enhanced Visibility and Market Recognition:
Awardees are featured in NIH and HHS announcements, helping attract partnerships, media attention, and future contracting opportunities.Access to the Federal Innovation Ecosystem:
Recipients join a national network of researchers and agencies advancing life science innovation, often opening doors to collaborations with NIH laboratories and federal health programs.Stronger Commercial and Exit Potential:
By maturing technology through nondilutive funding, companies strengthen valuation, de-risk commercialization, and increase attractiveness for acquisition or follow-on private investment.
What is the timeline to apply and when would I receive funding?
Applications are accepted each year on January 5th, April 5th, and September 5th. Funding is received approximately 9 months after submission.
Where does this funding come from?
Funding comes from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, with statutory set-asides requiring NIH, CDC, and FDA to devote portions of their extramural R&D budgets (3.2% for SBIR, 0.45% for STTR) to support small business innovation.
Who is eligible to apply?
Applicants must be U.S. small business concerns (SBCs) that:
Are organized for profit with a U.S. place of business.
Have ≤ 500 employees including affiliates.
Are > 50% owned by U.S. citizens or permanent residents, qualifying U.S. entities, or combinations thereof.
What companies and projects are likely to win?
Projects that demonstrate:
A clear unmet medical or public-health need,
Strong scientific rationale and feasibility,
High commercialization potential, supported by a realistic market and regulatory strategy, and
Alignment with an NIH Institute’s or CDC/FDA Center’s specific research mission (e.g., infectious disease, digital health, diagnostics, therapeutics, or data analytics).
Competitive applicants often have an early prototype, preliminary data, and a defined path to market adoption.
Are there any restrictions I should know about?
Companies must complete multiple federal registrations (SAM.gov, Grants.gov, eRA Commons, SBA Company Registry) before applying.
Foreign entities are not eligible.
Disclosure of foreign affiliations and compliance with national security screening are mandatory. Currently we do not recommend any sort of foreign affiliation.
How long will it take me to prepare an application?
For a first-time applicant, preparing a competitive submission will likely take 120–200 hours in total.
How can BW&CO help?
Our team specializes in complex federal R&D proposals and can:
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