Craif Wins 51st Inoue Harunari Award
Bio-AI startup Craif has been awarded the 51st Inoue Harunari Award for the social implementation of its multi-cancer early detection platform based on urinary microRNA analysis.
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- 📰 Published: June 11, 2026 at 10:00
- 🔍 Collected: June 11, 2026 at 10:24 (24 min after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 11, 2026 at 12:59 (2h 34m after Collected)
Bio-AI startup Craif Inc. has received the 51st Inoue Harunari Award for its 'multi-cancer early detection platform based on urinary microRNA analysis.' This technology, developed from the research of co-founder and technical advisor Takao Yasui (Professor, Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya University), was evaluated for successfully commercializing university-originated research and implementing it in society.
The Inoue Harunari Award, with a history spanning half a century, honors only two technological achievements annually that have contributed to the advancement of science, technology, economy, and welfare in Japan through the commercialization of creative research. Craif was recognized for transforming urinary microRNA analysis technology—rooted in Professor Yasui's basic research—into a cancer detection mechanism accessible to everyone without burden.
The core of this technology is a platform that reads molecular information about cancer from urine—a sample easily collected by anyone—to detect cancer at an early stage with high precision. Urine contains 'extracellular vesicles' released by cells, which carry microRNA molecules that regulate gene function. Cancer cells use microRNA to send information beneficial to their growth and metastasis, creating distinct patterns in urinary microRNA compared to healthy individuals. Craif was founded based on technology that uses nanowires to capture and analyze these urinary microRNAs. By combining this with large-scale databases of biomarkers and clinical data, as well as AI (machine learning), the company established a system to determine cancer risk based on patterns of multiple microRNAs.
Based on this technology, the company has developed an algorithm capable of detecting even pancreatic cancer—often considered difficult to detect early—at initial stages with accuracy exceeding traditional blood tumor markers, through joint research with several medical institutions.
Recently, the company became the world's first to demonstrate the mechanism by which cancer-derived extracellular vesicles are transported into urine via the renal glomerulus, scientifically validating urine as a useful biological source for cancer information.
This technology was commercialized for medical institutions in 2022 and subsequently evolved into 'miSignal,' a cancer risk test completed at home via urine collection and mailing. It is now introduced at approximately 2,500 medical institutions nationwide, offered at over 4,000 drugstores, and has begun being adopted through public funding by local governments. The successful commercialization of university-originated research and its implementation on a nationwide scale were highly praised in this award selection.
The Inoue Harunari Award, with a history spanning half a century, honors only two technological achievements annually that have contributed to the advancement of science, technology, economy, and welfare in Japan through the commercialization of creative research. Craif was recognized for transforming urinary microRNA analysis technology—rooted in Professor Yasui's basic research—into a cancer detection mechanism accessible to everyone without burden.
The core of this technology is a platform that reads molecular information about cancer from urine—a sample easily collected by anyone—to detect cancer at an early stage with high precision. Urine contains 'extracellular vesicles' released by cells, which carry microRNA molecules that regulate gene function. Cancer cells use microRNA to send information beneficial to their growth and metastasis, creating distinct patterns in urinary microRNA compared to healthy individuals. Craif was founded based on technology that uses nanowires to capture and analyze these urinary microRNAs. By combining this with large-scale databases of biomarkers and clinical data, as well as AI (machine learning), the company established a system to determine cancer risk based on patterns of multiple microRNAs.
Based on this technology, the company has developed an algorithm capable of detecting even pancreatic cancer—often considered difficult to detect early—at initial stages with accuracy exceeding traditional blood tumor markers, through joint research with several medical institutions.
Recently, the company became the world's first to demonstrate the mechanism by which cancer-derived extracellular vesicles are transported into urine via the renal glomerulus, scientifically validating urine as a useful biological source for cancer information.
This technology was commercialized for medical institutions in 2022 and subsequently evolved into 'miSignal,' a cancer risk test completed at home via urine collection and mailing. It is now introduced at approximately 2,500 medical institutions nationwide, offered at over 4,000 drugstores, and has begun being adopted through public funding by local governments. The successful commercialization of university-originated research and its implementation on a nationwide scale were highly praised in this award selection.
FAQ
Craifの第51回井上春成賞受賞の理由は?
大学発の独創的な研究成果である「尿中マイクロRNA解析技術」を、誰もが負担なく受けられるがん早期発見の仕組みとして、社会実装を実現した点が高く評価されました。
井上春成賞とはどのような賞ですか?
1976年に創設された、産学連携による研究成果の事業化を顕彰するわが国を代表する技術賞の一つです。原則として毎年2件のみが選定される選考の狭き門として知られています。
Craifの尿中マイクロRNA解析技術の特徴は?
尿中の細胞外小胞に含まれるマイクロRNAのパターンを、ナノワイヤ技術とAI(機械学習)を組み合わせて解析し、がんのリスクを早期かつ高精度に判定する技術です。
「miSignal(マイシグナル)」とはどのような検査ですか?
自宅で採尿し郵送するだけで検査が完結するがんリスク検査サービスです。現在は全国約2,500の医療機関や4,000店舗以上のドラッグストアで提供されています。
安井隆雄教授の研究とCraifの関係は?
安井氏はCraifの技術顧問・共同創業者であり、同氏が名古屋大学などで進めてきたナノデバイスによる生命分子解析の研究成果が、Craifのがん早期発見プラットフォームの基盤となっています。