2024 Startups to Watch: Love Lifesciences injects momentum as region doubles down on healthtech

January 3, 2024  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Bradley Hopper and Nick Love, Love Lifesciences

Editor’s note: Startland News editors selected 10 Kansas City scaling businesses to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. Now in its ninth year, this feature recognizes founders and startups that editors believe will make some of the biggest, most compelling news in the coming 12 months. The following is one of 2024’s companies.

Click here to view the full list of Startups to Watch — presented with support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, and independently produced by Startland News.

Recent energy surrounding healthcare technology in Kansas City makes the region an exciting place to build Love Lifesciences’ medical device startup — a venture that is reimagining the injection process, shared co-founders Nick Love and Bradley Hopper.

In October, Kansas City was designated a Tech Hub for vaccine development and biologics by the federal government, opening the door for as much as $75 million in funding. Then just a few weeks later, the Digital Health KC initiative was awarded a $2 million federal grant that was doubled by matching funds from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.

Elevator pitch: Love Lifesciences is developing a series of injection safety devices which will improve the patient experience when injection medications are required for care. We have redesigned the injection experience, providing patients complete injection control while limiting opportunity for error.

  • Founders: Nick Love, Bradley Hopper
  • Headquarters: Olathe, Kansas
  • Founding year: 2021
  • Current employee count: 2 full-time
  • Funding to date: $1.2 million
  • Noteworthy investors: Digital Sandbox KC, GROWKS
  • Noteworthy programs completed: Digital Sandbox KC

“It’s phenomenal,” Love said. “There’s a lot of energy. “We work very closely with Digital Health KC, BioNexus KC, BioKansas, all these different groups because they’re the ones that have the contacts in the network to people that we need to be working with. A lot of our deep R&D products are digital health related and so they provide tremendous resources and support.”

“With the Tech Hub, while it might be for vaccines and biologics, biologics are all injectables; vaccines are all injectables,” he added. “So we’re an appropriate application for some of those funds potentially.”

Knowing there’s a future for their health tech startup in Kansas City is exciting, Hopper continued.

“Just the momentum that’s going on is fantastic,” he added. “And to be a small part of that, it helps us keep our momentum up.”

Founded in 2021, Love Lifesciences has developed a series of therapeutic agnostic, hybrid injection devices intended to assist patients that must self administer injections, Love said, aiming to reduce unnecessary pain — and the anxiety and fear it often evokes. 

“Why not take the best of both worlds,” he explained, “provide the benefits from the auto injector but strip away those pain points and integrate the control that syringes allow.”

RELATED: Afraid of needles? This Kansas startup just raised $1M to inject its no-show solution into testing

Because patients have control and the injector is not automated, Love continued, their device does not have to be redeveloped or redesigned for every new therapeutic that is integrated, a benefit to pharmaceutical companies. 

“Auto injectors right now have about five years in development timelines and cost more than $5 million just to develop,” he noted. “So what we’re targeting is stripping away that entire process for our small and mid-sized pharma companies that really don’t have the five-year timeline to wait and they don’t have $5 million to integrate an injection device that they thought about at the last second, frankly.”

Over the past year, Love Lifesciences has gained a lot of momentum, the co-founders shared. 

Nick Love, CEO and co-founder of Love Lifesciences, center, talks with fellow InvestMidwest attendees at the spring 2023 conference in St. Louis; photo courtesy of InvestMidwest

In July, they closed a $1 million pre-seed round, led by Kansas-based angel investors and the GROWKS investment group. Prior to the pre-seed round, they received a $25,000 grant from Digital Sandbox KC and another $20,000 from the Kansas Department of Commerce. Including other funds from its friends and family round, Love Lifesciences has raised $1.2 million in funding since its inception.

“Having that access to the capital let us tee everything up as we need to and then initiate it and run with manufacturing and FDA processes and things like that,” Hopper said.

Over the past few months, Love noted, the startup also fell backwards into an interesting sub-market, opening the door to talks with more prospective clients.

“As we’ve continued these conversations, our attraction has grown in these spaces,” he continued. “In the injection devices space, it’s a difficult process when you’re looking at some of the larger competitors who are working with Johnson and Johnson, Pfizer, or Novo Nordisk. We’re a startup and we don’t have that proven track record.”

“It’s phenomenal traction,” Love added, “and it’s really pushing us along pretty far.”

In 2024, Love and Hopper said they are looking to wrap up FDA testing and submit their UniPen — single injection — device for FDA approval, plus have conversations with pharmaceutical partners about integrating the device into clinical trials.

“The hardest part about our industry specifically is the amount of regulation involved,” Love noted.

They also plan to launch a Series A funding round and continue to work on secondary devices like their MultiPen, a multiuse injection device that allows for time-gated access to injectables, which can prevent overdosing or underdosing on the injectable therapeutics.

Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2024

[slide-anything id=”696451″]

Startups to Watch is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2024 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Sellozo

        KC-based Sellozo opens upgraded analytics platform to Amazon sellers

        By Tommy Felts | October 22, 2018

        Upping the stakes, true profit tracking platform Sellozo plans to roll out a new level of access for its users selling on retail giant Amazon, said Jessica McCune. “It’s definitely cool to have the capability to work with more than just the North American marketplace,” McCune, the Kansas City-grown company’s marketing specialist, said of the…

        Dream Muscle Coffee

        Dream Muscle Coffee roasts hipster coffee shop stereotype with protein brew targeting KC’s east side

        By Tommy Felts | October 19, 2018

        When life hands out lemons, some people turn them into lemonade. But what happens when it throws 300 pounds of coffee beans in your direction? You percolate new ideas that can disrupt an overcaffeinated market and strengthen a community, Timothy Shockley chuckled. “A friend of mine closed his [Shawnee] coffee shop and left [the beans]…

        Missouri Hyperloop

        Talent pipeline: Missouri Hyperloop could be a light at the end of the tech jobs tunnel

        By Tommy Felts | October 19, 2018

        A high-speed Missouri Hyperloop route connecting Kansas City and St. Louis would power a state-spanning metro area with fluid access to tech jobs and talent, as well as a region pumped for economic growth, leaders familiar with the proposed project said. “You could easily live in St. Louis and work in Kansas City, and have…

        Cough Detection

        Collaboration in the air: Cough detection sensors combine Sickweather, Mycroft tech

        By Tommy Felts | October 18, 2018

        You can’t manage what you can’t measure, said Sickweather CEO Graham Dodge, describing the need for cough detection sensors that are slated to be rolled out in public places across Kansas City in 2019. Illness forecaster Sickweather is teaming up with fellow Kansas City startup Mycroft, a leader in artificial intelligence-infused tech, to develop the…