Press Release

LyoWave President Testifies Before U.S. Senate Committee on America's Bioeconomy

April 7, 2026

Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) and LyoWave President Dr. Alina Alexeenko
Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) chairs the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee field hearing in Carmel, Indiana, with the panel of Hoosier bioscience leaders, including LyoWave President Dr. Alina Alexeenko.
Photo: Office of Senator Todd Young

Modernizing America's biomanufacturing infrastructure has become a national priority - and the U.S. Senate turned to LyoWave to help make the case for how small businesses get it done.

LyoWave co-founder and President Dr. Alina Alexeenko testified on April 7, 2026, at a U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship field hearing in Carmel, Indiana, focused on “Fueling Innovation: The Role of Small Businesses in America’s Bioeconomy.” The hearing brought together Hoosier leaders working across life sciences, manufacturing, and biotech product innovation to discuss the importance of small businesses in strengthening the nation’s bioeconomy.

In her remarks, Dr. Alexeenko outlined LyoWave's mission to modernize lyophilization - the freeze-drying process at the heart of manufacturing biologics such as cancer diagnostics and therapies, vaccines, and injectable antibiotics. Drawing on history, she traced lyophilization's roots to a landmark WWII-era public-private partnership that produced freeze-dried blood plasma for wounded soldiers, calling it the foundation of American leadership in biotechnology throughout the 20th century.

LyoWave team with IN Senator Todd Young
From left: Dr. Dimitrios Peroulis, Dr. Alina Alexeenko, Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), Dr. Steven Pugia, Dr. Ahmad Darwish

Dr. Alexeenko described LyoWave's journey from a Purdue University research prototype to a commercial product: the TurboDry™ high-frequency microwave lyophilization system - a compact, highly integrated unit that fits in a carry-on bag and can be installed on existing lyophilization equipment. Reflecting on the path from university lab to startup, she emphasized the critical role of public-private partnerships - including NIIMBL, NIST's AMTech program, LyoHUB and Purdue's entrepreneurship resources, and SBIR funding - in bridging the gap between scientific invention and market-ready products.

Dr. Alexeenko's Recommendations for Congress

Dr. Alexeenko closed her testimony with three policy recommendations for Congress:

  • Strengthen SBIR/STTR programs and incentivize small-business participation in reshoring critical bio/pharma manufacturing.

  • Create adoption incentives to help biotech manufacturers offset the regulatory acceptance costs of advanced technologies, building on the FDA's new Advanced Manufacturing Technology Designation Program.

  • Build a national network of shared-use facilities with GMP-relevant equipment, creating a "speedway" for testing and de-risking new biomanufacturing technologies.

LyoWave's appearance before the Senate Committee marks a milestone for the young Indiana startup and underscores the growing national urgency to modernize biomanufacturing infrastructure - and the role innovative small businesses playin making that happen.

About LyoWave Inc.

At LyoWave, we’re supercharging the pharmaceutical freeze-drying process using state-of-the-art, high-frequency microwave heating technology. Our solution accelerates your freeze-drying process while simultaneously improving throughput and uniformity. It is compatible with bench-top to production-scale freeze-drying systems and everything in between, and seamlessly transfers your freeze-drying process from the laboratory to pilot or commercial scales.

Watch the Full Hearing:
https://www.sbc.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2026/4/fueling-innovation-the-role-of-small-businesses-in-america-s-bioeconomy
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