Dr. Jethro Ekuta Joins BP Logix Life Sciences Strategic Advisory Board
BP Logix, a leading provider of AI-enabled medical affairs automation technology, is proud to announce the appointment of Dr. Jethro Ekuta to its Life Sciences Strategic Advisory Board.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250616133371/en/
Dr. Jethro Ekuta, member of the BP Logix Life Sciences Strategic Advisory Board.
Dr. Ekuta is the Chair of the Board of Directors for the Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society (RAPS) and currently serves as Chief Regulatory & Safety Officer at Ascendis Pharma.
With over 30 years of experience in regulatory affairs and pharmacovigilance, Dr. Ekuta brings a deep understanding of global compliance, regulatory strategy and innovation in drug development. He has held senior leadership roles at organizations including Ascendis Pharma, Alexion (AstraZeneca Rare Disease), Horizon Therapeutics (Amgen), Johnson & Johnson, Genzyme (Sanofi), Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pfizer and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
'We are honored to welcome Dr. Ekuta to our Life Sciences Strategic Advisory Board,' said Girish Pashilkar, CEO of BP Logix. 'His regulatory insight and leadership will be instrumental as we continue to expand our footprint in the life sciences sector and support teams navigating increasingly complex review and approval processes.'
'I've spent my career working to improve regulatory systems and processes within the pharmaceutical and biotech industries,' said Dr. Ekuta. 'I believe BP Logix is uniquely positioned to help life sciences organizations streamline compliance, reduce risk and move faster without compromising integrity. I'm excited to contribute to the company's mission and support its growth in this critical space.'
In his advisory role, Dr. Ekuta will provide strategic input across marketing, product, and customer engagement initiatives. His appointment is part of a broader effort by BP Logix to deepen its alignment with industry leaders and further tailor its solutions to the evolving needs of life sciences organizations.
About BP Logix
BP Logix helps medical affairs and regulatory teams at life sciences organizations streamline complex review and approval workflows. Its flagship solution, PubPro, simplifies the publication process, while the broader Approvia platform supports use cases such as MLR reviews, clearance systems, medical information requests and IIS evaluations. With a focus on configurability, compliance and speed, BP Logix empowers teams to reduce risk, improve collaboration and bring high-quality treatments to market faster.
To learn more about BP Logix and its work in life sciences, visit www.bplogix.com.
View source version on businesswire.com:https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250616133371/en/
Media contact: Catie Leary, [email protected]
KEYWORD: UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA CALIFORNIA
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: TECHNOLOGY HEALTH TECHNOLOGY SOFTWARE NETWORKS INTERNET MANAGED CARE HEALTH DATA MANAGEMENT ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
SOURCE: BP Logix
Copyright Business Wire 2025.
PUB: 06/16/2025 07:00 AM/DISC: 06/16/2025 06:59 AM
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250616133371/en
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
EQT and CPP Investments to acquire NEOGOV, a provider of HR and compliance software for U.S. public sector agencies, from Warburg Pincus and Carlyle
The EQT X fund ("EQT") and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board ("CPP Investments") have agreed to acquire NEOGOV, which serves over 10,000 public sector agencies with purpose-built government HR and compliance software solutions NEOGOV's cloud-native solutions support the full employee lifecycle and help public sector agencies drive efficiency and stay compliant with local policies and regulatory frameworks EQT and CPP Investments will partner with CEO Shane Evangelist and the management team to accelerate growth and expansion, building upon their track records in the US software sector STOCKHOLM, July 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- EQT announced today that the EQT X fund ("EQT") together with Canada Pension Plan Investment Board ("CPP Investments") have agreed to acquire NEOGOV (the "Company") from funds managed by Warburg Pincus and Carlyle. Founded in 2000 and headquartered in El Segundo, California, NEOGOV delivers purpose-built human capital management and public safety solutions to nearly 10,000 public sector organizations across North America. NEOGOV's cloud-native suite supports the full employee lifecycle – from recruitment and onboarding to performance management and compliance management – while helping agencies stay compliant with local policies and regulatory frameworks. "Local governments are the backbone of our communities. Our mission is to help them operate more efficiently and serve citizens more effectively. EQT and CPP Investments share our vision and bring the experience and capital to help us scale faster," said Shane Evangelist, CEO of NEOGOV. "Our priorities include advancing product innovation and AI capabilities to help public sector agencies drive increased efficiency and compliance adherence. EQT and CPP Investments' deep expertise in software and broad network of advisors will be instrumental to supporting NEOGOV's growth." "We are excited to partner with Shane and the NEOGOV team, who are operators at the highest levels. The team brings a deep understanding of the challenges that public sector agencies face, and we're proud to support a company that has earned such trust in the public sector," said Arvindh Kumar, Partner and Co-Head of EQT's Global Technology Team. Tyler Parker, Managing Director in the EQT Private Equity advisory team, added: "It's rare to find a software company that is so well-loved by its customers, and we look forward to partnering with NEOGOV to continue to modernize public sector operations and deliver impactful technology to those on the front lines of civic service." "NEOGOV is a leading software platform with distinct customer offerings that is poised for growth due to increasing demand from its customers across North America. Together with its strong management team, the Company is a good fit for our strategy to invest in high-quality software companies. We look forward to supporting the Company in this next phase of development alongside EQT and the management team," said Sam Blaichman, Managing Director, Head of Direct Private Equity, CPP Investments. With this transaction, EQT X is expected to be 60 – 65 percent invested (including closed and/or signed investments, announced public offers, if applicable, and less any expected syndication). The transaction is subject to customary conditions and approvals and is slated for completion in the coming months. Moelis & Company LLC served as exclusive financial advisor and Willkie Farr & Gallagher served as legal counsel to NEOGOV. Jefferies LLC served as exclusive financial advisor and Ropes & Gray served as legal counsel to EQT. Contact EQT: EQT Press Office, press@ CPP Investments: Asher Levine, Public Affairs & Communications, alevine@ T: +1 929 208 7939NEOGOV: Scott Jensen, Vice President of Marketing, sjensen@ This information was brought to you by Cision The following files are available for download: PR_EQT CPPI NEOGOV_25.07.28 DSC03016 View original content: Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why Dispo's co-founder made the leap from social media to steelmaking
Daniel Liss, co-founder of the social network Dispo and the dating app Teaser AI, is convinced he's onto the next big thing: steelmaking. It all started, incongruously, with a few op-eds he wrote for TechCrunch about anti-trust enforcement in social media. The commentaries apparently caught the attention of some folks in Washington D.C., Liss told TechCrunch, and resulted in him being invited to guest judge a war game capstone exercise in spring 2023 hosted by the National War College. The war game was very au courant, running a scenario in which the U.S. and China fought for supremacy over Taiwan and the South China Sea. Liss's take away from the exercise? 'Our core supply chain of the arsenal of democracy — literally, the ships that my grandfather fought in — we don't have the ship-building capacity. If we did, we don't have the steel to make it,' he said. At that point, Liss said he became 'really interested — obsessed, even' with the steel supply chain. 'That was really the birth of Nemo Industries.' The basic pitch for Nemo Industries, Liss's latest startup, appears as though it were drawn from a Venn diagram of two very American anxieties, steelmaking and AI. The company, until now, has been operating in stealth, but Liss gave TechCrunch a peek behind the scenes. First, the obvious part: Nemo will use AI to optimize the production of pig iron, modernizing an industry that Liss said is woefully outdated. 'These plants are run on, at best, Excel spreadsheets. At worst, clipboard technology,' he said. The people who run them have 'unbelievable expertise,' he added, but that's the sort of thing that doesn't scale well. But Liss isn't pitching Nemo as just another piece of industrial software. Rather, Nemo is planning to build its own furnaces. The decision was driven by Liss's conviction that companies which use AI from inception will have a '20% to 30% margin advantage' over competitors. In steelmaking, such conviction doesn't come cheap. Hyundai Motor Group said in March that it would build a $6 billion steel plant in Louisiana to supply its factories in the U.S. Nemo's plant may not cost that much since its operations will be focused on pig iron, an intermediate product which steelmakers use to make a range of different alloys. Nemo will fire its furnaces using natural gas, which releases less carbon dioxide than coal, which is commonly used in the iron and steel industry. Liss said the company is considering capturing the furnaces' carbon pollution; tax incentives introduced under the Inflation Reduction Act remain largely intact, and they make the endeavor profitable for Nemo, he said. Liss's partner in Nemo is Michael DuBose, an investor who previously worked at Cheniere Energy, a natural gas company. 'He's built billions of dollars in LNG infrastructure,' Liss said. The startup will need that sort of scale if it's to succeed. Nemo previously raised $28.2 million, according to PitchBook, and it is currently in talks with existing investors to raise a $100 million Series A with existing investors, a person familiar with the matter told TechCrunch. The company also has received offers for over $1 billion in incentives from two southern states if the company can build three plants over the course of 15 years, the person said. It's a tall order for anyone to tackle, but Liss said that sort of ambition is required if the steel industry is going to deliver the sort of returns desired by venture capitalists. And, he added, basic industries like steel have historically delivered big wins for investors. 'When you look at the history of our country, many of the greatest companies that created outsize outcomes for their initial investors were in these categories,' Liss said. 'Ultimately, what were the Rockefellers and the Carnegies and the Melons and the Fricks investing in? The dollar amounts are so big in these categories.'
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Colorado's Deion Sanders had bladder removed after cancer diagnosis
Colorado head football coach Deion Sanders announced Monday he was diagnosed with bladder cancer earlier this year. Sanders held a news conference to reveal the news as Colorado embarks on fall camp ahead of the 2025 season. Dr. Janet Kukreja, Sanders' doctor at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, said Sanders had his bladder removed after a malignant tumor was found and that he had been "cured" from the cancer. 'The process wasn't easy,' Sanders said as he relayed that doctors presented him with multiple options to deal with the cancer. Kukreja said the type of cancer Sanders was dealing with had a high recurrence rate and that he decided to go forward with the "curative" option of having his bladder removed. Sanders, 57, said that he knew he had surgery upcoming for the tumor as his son Shedeur Sanders dealt with a rough draft weekend after he fell from a possible first-round NFL Draft pick to the fifth round. "There was some scenes you saw, all the bull junk that's transpired on draft day," Sanders said. "It wasn't just that. It was just, I knew as well I had a surgery coming up. My sons, to this day, don't know what transpired, I just told them it was something with my foot, because I wanted to give them the focus on making the team and not focused on dad." The Pro Football Hall of Famer had been away from the team and at his home in Texas after spring practice to deal with health issues. He appeared at Big 12 media days earlier in July and declined to answer questions about his health while at the podium during his appearance there. He said Monday that not continuing to coach never crossed his mind after he was diagnosed and that Randy Moss had been a source of strength for him in their conversations. Moss was diagnosed with bile duct cancer in 2024 and is set to return full-time to his role at ESPN for the 2025 football season. Colorado assistant athletic trainer Lauren Askevold said Sanders' cancer discovery came after he went through his routine vascular tests. The training staff received a call from his primary care doctor after the vascular tests, and the process of setting up a visit with a urologist and diagnosing what was going on began. Kukreja said that Sanders' tumor was discovered early before it had a chance to metastasize into something even more serious. "I didn't have any signs," Sanders said. Sanders detailed what he's gone through since the surgery and said that he "can't pee like I used to pee. It's totally different." He also said he had lost 25 pounds at one point. 'I depend on Depend if you know what I mean," Sanders said. "I cannot control my bladder. So I get up to go to the bathroom already 4-5 times a night. And I'm sitting there waking up like my grandson. We in the same thing. We got the same problem right now. We're going through the same trials and tribulations.' Sanders said fans will likely see a portable toilet on the sidelines of Colorado games this fall and said he wanted to serve as an example for people who may also be going through similar cancer diagnoses. His new bladder was created with parts of his intestine. 'It's just totally different and I know there's a lot of people out there going through what I am going through and dealing with what I am dealing with and let's stop being ashamed of it and let's deal with it. And let's deal with it head on.' Sanders' news conference came after he posted to social media that he had recently completed his will. He said he informed his coaching staff and his team of the cancer diagnosis on Sunday. "You don't want to be a fool and leave and not have your business affairs in order," Sanders said. The vascular tests are routine for Sanders after he had two toes amputated on his left foot in 2021 while he was the coach at Jackson State. The toes were removed after Sanders had dealt with a blood clot and compartment syndrome. He said Monday he's had 14 surgeries since 2021. Sanders is entering his third season as Colorado's head coach. The Buffaloes went 9-4 in 2024 after going 4-8 in his first season in Boulder.