Diabetes Monitoring Start-Ups:Building a Better Mousetrap or a Whole New Paradigm?
This article was originally published in Start Up
Executive Summary
All facets of diabetes are a big focus of start-up and venture capital interest these days--insulin, blood-glucose testing, and new small-molecule drugs. Blood glucose monitoring is one of the few areas of in vitro diagnostics that attracts a significant amount of investor interest. Startups in this field pick one of two tacts: to try to change the testing paradigm with revolutionary technologies or to introduce incremental improvements, which could help attract big corporate partners.
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Where are They Now? Checking in on Three Glucose-Monitoring Start-Ups
Laying out a strategy is one thing; executing it is another. That's why, from time to time, START-UP revisits companies it has written about in the past to find out what went according to plan, and what didn't. As we revisit the field of glucose monitoring--a field with a high attrition rate, we'll see if we can draw out some lessons, both from the successes and from the failures, for those starting out today. (Introduction to three separate articles in the December 2007 issue: "Pelikan Technologies Swoops in on the Big Four"; "A Decade of Development for SMSI: Will It Yield Improved Accuracy in CGM?" and "GlucoLight Makes Non-invasive Glucose Monitoring Real.")
Business & Technology Briefs (03/2007)
Brief summaries of recent product and clinical developments in the device industry, including developments in Cardiac and Peripheral Devices, Miniature Robotic Devices, and Diabetes Management.
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