Clara Biotech boasts first-of-its-kind cancer detection from lab in Lawrence
August 13, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
A Kansas startup says its cancer detection process — requiring only a single blood sample — could dramatically simplify a often-harrowing health care experience, as well as lead to personalized treatments for illnesses ranging from cancer to neurological diseases like Parkinson’s or multiple sclerosis.
Founders: Dr. Mei He, James West
Founding year: 2015
Amount raised to date: $315,000
Programs completed: NIH I-Corps 2018 1% SBIR Awards; Hello Tomorrow 2018 Top 500 Finalist; Atlanta Startup Battle 2019 Top 10 Finalist; NIH MedTech Innovators Top 150 Finalist; Partnering for Growth Finalist 2019 Top 10 Finalist
Clara Biotech — based in Lawrence at the BioScience and Technology Business Center (BSTB) — was founded by University of Kansas assistant professor Dr. Mei He in 2015 after research pointed to a possible platform that isolates the exosomes that facilitate cancer activity much more efficiently than the currently accepted ultracentrifugation process, said James West.
Click here to learn more about Clara Biotech.

James West, Clara Biotech
“It really is a transformative medical opportunity,” said West, CEO at Clara. “If we were to just take breast cancer exosomes and isolate them — because [we could determine] their exact communication network — you could actually patch drugs or other things to them, then put them back in and see a personalized, drug delivery vehicle based on your own biology.”
“What Clara is trying to do is not actually develop any single one of these treatments or diagnostics — we’re trying to solve the sample preparation broadly for researchers and companies that want to bring these applications to market,” he explained.
Officing directly across the street from He’s KU research lab makes collaboration between the university and BSTB simple and extremely beneficial — especially as the startup struggles to find area investors willing to take on the early-stage firm in the biotech industry, he added.
“A lot of investors want a little more traction before they’re willing to invest and there’s the same requirements on the coast, but in Kansas City the other problem is that … expertise among the investment community with what we’re doing is not readily available,” West said.
“Our goal is to build everything in Lawrence but that kind of depends on a lot of different factors — one being the [locating] of people that we need to help build out our product,” he added.

Dr. Mei He, Clara Biotech
Strengthening the sales and marketing process for the firm’s exosome isolation services is the priority for the next year, as well as starting to manufacture and source their own biofluids to sell to researchers or companies also in the field, said West.
“One of the nice things about our technology is that we can actually provide the highest quality [of exosomes] in the most pure sources,” he added.
Farther down the road is the manufacturing of the ExoSS lab tool — available through the Early Access Program for immediate service upon the official product launch — making the exosome isolation process possible in any lab wishing to work independently, he said. The implications of widely using the process could mean significant treatments for illnesses that previously proved to be lifelong afflictions, he added.
“Cancer is not the limit,” West said. “[The process is as revolutionary] in the same way that stem cells and genetic engineering and other things have grown in the field of biology.”
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Innovation Stockyard feeds effort to protect food chain
When feeding the world, being proactive on animal health technology is vital, Ronan Molloy said. “The reality is, its importance will only hit home when we have a significant event, like a swine flu,” Molloy, president of Innovation Stockyard, said. “Then all of the sudden people will say ‘Oh, why is my fillet now $40…
Students bump shoulders with architects at STEAM Studio
Most children won’t have experience working in a professional environment until they land their first job or internship, Mandi Sonnenberg said. “Some kids may have popped into their mom or dad’s work and have gone to a professional space at least a couple times in their life,” Sonnenberg said. “But for kids in the urban…
Smart City Living Lab opens, targets growing pains of a swelling city
The much-anticipated “Kansas City Living Lab” — a platform for application development that taps the Kansas City Smart City initiative — is now welcoming new tech partners. Using smart city infrastructure, the Living Lab allows innovators to test and commercialize technologies that can solve problems in Kansas City. The project is led by Think Big…
JE Dunn spinout Site 1001 raises millions more from local investors
A Kansas City-based tech firm that’s created a smart buildings platform recently raised another significant batch of venture capital funding. Site 1001 — a technology spin out from Kansas City construction giant JE Dunn Construction — raised $6 million to boost its engineering, research and sales efforts. The round was led by JE Dunn Construction…

