Trially secures $4.7M seed round, launches ‘Margo’ AI solution to clear patient bottleneck
September 16, 2025 | Startland News Staff
A Kansas City startup’s AI-first platform is expected to save time — and patient lives — thanks to a successful seed round for its clinical trial recruitment tech, explained Kyle McAllister, noting his startup’s solution could help speed up access to treatment by years.
Trially, one of Startland News’ 10 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2025, on Tuesday announced a $4.7 million funding round, led by led by Kansas City-based Flyover Capital, with participation from Alpaca, Atria, Blu Ventures, Looking Glass Capital, Redbud, The Council, and Gaingels.
“We’re bridging the gap between life-saving medicine and the people who need it now,” said McAllister, co-founder of Trially, which aims to get patients into clinical trials faster by using its artificial intelligence tools to immediately match and engage them with the right programs.
The simple concept: patients shouldn’t have to wait years for life-saving treatments while trials are running in their own backyard, McAllister added.
Another pain point: With 86 percent of clinical trials delayed because of recruitment failures, the pharmaceutical industry is losing more than $600,000 every day.
“Clinical trial recruitment has been the industry’s Achilles’ heel for decades,” said Thad Langford, founding partner at Flyover Capital. “Trially is the first solution we’ve seen that not only identifies eligible patients, but also engages and enrolls them. We’re thrilled to back Kyle and the Trially team as they accelerate access to life-saving treatments.”
The startup on Tuesday also officially announced “Margo,” its agentic AI solution that converts patient matches into participants with its trio of offerings:
- Trially Match — safely reads rich medical data to instantly match patients to trials
- Trially Connect — Margo agentic AI outreach directly pre-screens patient matches to convert qualified candidates into enrollments.
- Trially Intelligence — pipeline radar that proactively alerts a user to trials that are a fit for their patient population with instant feasibility analytics
“Recruitment has always been the bottleneck in clinical research,” said McAllister. “With Margo, we’re not just matching patients, we’re engaging and enrolling them. That’s what sets Trially apart: we can identify patients with 95 percent screening accuracy and then agentic AI can engage them at the exact moment it matters most.”
Trially is the first fully integrated AI platform to tackle the root cause of delay, the company said. Its HIPAA-compliant LLM agents safely analyze unstructured medical data to instantly match, connect and enroll patients in relevant trials — transforming a process that once required 100s of hours of manual chart reviews and cold calling into instant enrollment opportunities.
With its new funding, Trially is expected to accelerate adoption of its platform across research sites, pharmaceutical sponsors, CROs and physician networks, ensuring sponsors can avoid costly delays and patients can access life-saving treatments when it matters most, McAllister said.
RELATED: Trially scaling to next level as an early investor forecasts unlocked opportunity

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Artist incubator paints scene of blissful collaboration in far-from-lonely West Bottoms space
Vanessa Lacy’s artist incubator eliminates “the lonely artist,” she said, noting her gallery model replaces solitude with creative relationships and a collaborative community. “Artists tend to get very isolated in their studio spaces working on their own; then they have a relationship with a gallery that’s really more of a business relationship,” said Lacy, owner…
Take the Kauffman survey: Is KC’s startup culture welcoming and inclusive to all?
Perception shapes reality, said organizers of a survey that seeks greater understanding of Kansas City’s startup culture. The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s 2018 Entrepreneurship in Kansas City survey checks the pulse of the local entrepreneurial ecosystem by raising specific questions about culture and practice in workplaces across the metro, said John Quinterno and Julie Marks,…
Onward scores $1M grant from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative for payday loan end-run
Everyone needs a financial cushion, said Ronnie Washington — even a fintech startup offering low- to moderate-income workers a path to avoid predatory lending practices, the Onward founder said. A member of KC-based Fountain City Fintech’s inaugural cohort, Onward is one of 10 companies from across the U.S. and Puerto Rico being awarded $1 million…


