A startup with Theranos ties has another blood test in the works. This time, competition is waiting.
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Diagnostics companies are having trouble escaping the shadow cast by Theranos, the blood testing biotech that failed in spectacular fashion. That challenge is already facing the new diagnostics startup Haemanthus — and it hasn’t even emerged from stealth.

Of course, it doesn’t help that Haemanthus is led by the partner of disgraced Theranos founder, Elizabeth Holmes, who’s serving 11 years in a federal prison for defrauding investors.

Haemanthus CEO Billy Evans, who has two children with Holmes, is in fundraising mode for the startup, according to reports this week from NPR and The New York Times, which cited marketing materials and anonymous sources.

Haemanthus, which translates to “blood flower” in Greek, is developing a device it calls the “future of diagnostics” that will test blood, saliva and urine, initially to be used in veterinary medicine. Prototype images of its tech published by The New York Times showed a compact box resembling the device Theranos created. Haemanthus’ device will reportedly leverage Raman spectroscopy and AI sensors to test the materials.

The company is hoping to rake in $50 million to advance its R&D, but has also raised eyebrows, it admitted in a post on X.

“We’re Haemanthus. Yes, our CEO, Billy Evans, is Elizabeth Holmes’ partner. Skepticism is rational. We must clear a high bar,” the post reads.

Holmes was convicted of lying to investors by falsely claiming Theranos’ device could quickly run a slew of tests with a pinprick of blood, an approach that would revolutionize the field by providing a much faster and far less invasive option for patients.

Haemanthus claims its technology will detect and qualify glucose and hormone biomarkers in seconds while identifying cancer and infections through deep learning models, according to reports.

Companion diagnostics — especially those that pinpoint genetic biomarkers — are playing an increasingly important role in the pharma industry as it shifts to developing more personalized medicines. Drugmakers are also turning to diagnostic and biomarker tests to make clinical trials more efficient by identifying targeted patient populations.

During Holmes’ tenure at Theranos, major pharma companies, including Pfizer, explored using its tech in drug trials before a whistleblower exposed it didn’t work.

While Holmes’ role at Haemanthus is unclear, the SEC banned her in 2018 from serving as a director or officer at a public company for 10 years. And if Haemanthus officially gets off the ground, it will face competition — along with ongoing opportunities — in a market that’s shifted since Theranos fell from grace.