2019 Startups to Watch: Metactive patience set to payoff for medical device patients
January 14, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
Editor’s note: Startland selected 12 Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2019’s companies. Click here to view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch.
Metactive’s elevator pitch: Medical tech company that makes catheter-based devices used to treat cardiovascular disease, stroke, cancer, and life-threatening bleeding.
Metactive Medical worked through three generations of its anticipated cardiovascular devices before finally making strides in late 2018 to get regulatory approval for commercialization in 2020, said Dr. Nicholas Franano.
Founders: Dr. Nicholas Franano, William Whitaker
Founding year: 2014
Amount raised to date: $11.5 million
Noteworthy investors: Open Prairie Ventures II, former Kansas Bioscience Authority, Mid-America Angels, Women’s Capital Connection
Current employee count: 6 full-time, 3 consultants
The formerly practicing physician paired up with co-founder William Whitaker, a former attorney and biotech industry veteran, to replace 20-year-old technology currently being utilized in medicine, he said.
Though the second iteration of the devices worked well enough to be taken to market, the Metactive team saw an opportunity for a larger impact, he added.
“Our team said it wasn’t ready,” said Franano. “[Our investors] supported us for another year and that patience, I think, is really going to pay off for them because what we had before was good, what we have now is amazing.”
Metactive’s first products have the potential to treat 150,000 patients a year, said Franano, noting a significant uptick from the previous generation’s estimated 15,000.
“I think one of the things that makes 2019 interesting for us is that it’s going to be the first time physicians and the market and our competitors and patients get to see the new devices and [we will] treat our first patients,” said the co-founder, of the first human clinical trials.
2019 also is the first opportunity for Metactive’s potential acquisition, he added, though 2020 is the current estimation on an exit time.
“I think we’re an obvious acquisition target,” said Franano. “We’re a small company that has something really great and there are multiple competitors in the marketplace that have the old generation technology. That’s what happens in medical devices right now.”
Truly innovative medical devices tend to come from smaller companies, said Franano, noting such startups struggle to reach a global salesforce — less of a concern after an acquisition.
An exit of $100 million to $300 million would grant a sizable return to investors, he said, noting the funds have the potential to be cycled back into the Kansas City startup ecosystem.
“[We] can fuel the growth of other startups,” he added. “We’ve raised money from entrepreneurs who’ve sold their companies, and then when we sell one of our companies, I’m sure we’re gonna invest in entrepreneurs who are getting going on their first company. … It’s kind of a virtuous cycle.”
1) Bungii
2) ShotTracker
3) RiskGenius
4) Metactive
5) Pepper IoT
6) Signal Kit
7) Life Equals
8) Bellwethr
9) Homebase.ai
10) Tea-Biotics Kombucha
11) SquareOffs
12) Zohr
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Trio of tech startups hop in the Digital Sandbox
A trio of tech startups have entered the Kansas City-based incubator Digital Sandbox KC. Led by entrepreneur Jeff Shackelford, the incubator welcomed Flokk, Routine Success and Tapyness into its program. Digital Sandbox invests up to $25,000 in area businesses for specific projects that help the firms secure additional funding. The organization has now supported 73…
BetaBlox expands to Tulsa, shares 4-year plan
Thanks to a recent fundraise, Kansas City-style innovation is heading south to the Sooner State. After scoring new investment capital, Kansas City-based BetaBlox is expanding its incubator program to Tulsa this summer, bringing with it four years of experience in honing startups. BetaBlox founder Weston Bergmann said his for-equity incubator has partnered with the non-profit…
Weston Bergmann explains BetaBlox and its successful 2016 class
Since launching it in 2012, BetaBlox founder Weston Bergmann has always been impressed by the caliber of firms entering his incubator. But this year, Bergmann said he was blown away by the firms presenting at BetaBlox Demo Day celebration Monday. “It’s kind of cliche to say this class is better than the last, but it’s true,”…
Meet the BetaBlox startups ahead of Demo Day
Kansas City-based accelerator BetaBlox is gearing up for its annual culminating event to highlight startups in its current class. Set for Monday, BetaBlox’s Demo Day offers a stage for its 10 startup firms to pitch their businesses to investors, area residents and fellow entrepreneurs. While also a showcase of its startups, BetaBlox hopes the Demo Day will engage…

