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News
US biotech start-up to make first acquisition in the endometriosis diagnostic market
Hera Biotech is developing the world’s first molecular, cell-based test for diagnosing and staging endometriosis

The US endometriosis start-up Hera Biotech has reached an agreement to acquire the endometriosis diagnostic assets and associated IP of single-cell and biomarker discovery company Scailyte.
Endometriosis is an often-painful condition in which tissue similar to the inner lining of the womb grows outside the womb, affecting the ovaries, fallopian tubes and the tissue lining the pelvis.
Currently, the standard of care for diagnosis is a laparoscopic surgery with histopathology of the excised lesions. The surgical nature of the procedure contributes to the lack of diagnosis and the eight-year average delay until women get diagnosed.
The research performed by Hera and Scailyte and their academic partners has found that there are significant changes in the transcriptome profiles of endometrium samples obtained from endometriosis patients compared to samples from control patients.
Based on these findings, the two companies have developed complementary biomarkers and assays for the diagnosis of endometriosis, which offer a non-invasive way to detect the disorder.
The consolidation of the tissue-based biomarkers is hoped to accelerate the development of clinical tools to diagnose and stratify endometriosis patients and enable the discovery of new endometriosis therapies.
Dr Peter Nestorov, Scailyte CEO, said: “We are excited to work with Hera to integrate Scailyte’s endometriosis assets into the Hera pipeline. Through our collaboration with Professor Michael Mueller from the University of Bern, we have generated the largest single-cell RNAseq datasets from peripheral blood and endometrial tissue.
“The insights we gained clearly indicate that the tissue-based approach is the only way to capture the complexity and heterogeneity of endometriosis and therefore tissue-based molecular assays will be the only viable alternative to laparoscopy for a definitive diagnosis and patient stratification.”
The work conducted by the companies has shown that utilising tissue-based samples obtained from a non-surgical pipelle, the diagnostic utility of the test would be superior to those developed from liquid biopsy samples that measure secondary markers to correlate to a diagnosis.
According to Hera, the initial product in the combined portfolio was developed using Scailyte’s discovery platform analysing over six billion transcriptomic data points from 169 patients to yield a highly specific diagnostic assay for endometriosis.
Hera intends to launch the product into the US fertility market in late 2024. The start-up intends to follow this launch with a second product for the definitive diagnosis and staging of endometriosis in the OB/GYN market.
Somer Baburek, co-founder and CEO Hera Biotech, said: “We are delighted that this partnership also affords Hera the opportunity to add Dr Cinzia Donato to our executive team and Professor Michael Mueller to our scientific advisory board.
“Dr Donato and Professor Mueller were the driving forces behind Scailyte’s endometriosis diagnostic programme and bring a breadth of scientific and commercial skills to complement Hera’s in-house diagnostic programmes.
“We are excited to announce this partnership in conjunction with our US$15m Series A raise, which we are kicking off at the JP Morgan Healthcare conference next week.”
The two companies are expected to execute the transaction by the end of January.
Diagnosis
WHO launches AI tool for reproductive health information

The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched an AI tool in beta to help policymakers, experts and healthcare professionals access sexual and reproductive health information faster.
Called ChatHRP, the tool was created by WHO’s Human Reproduction Programme and draws only on verified research and guidance collected by HRP and WHO.
It uses natural language processing and retrieval-augmented generation to produce referenced content and cut the time spent searching through documents across different platforms and databases.
WHO said ChatHRP also has multilingual capabilities and low-bandwidth functionality to support use in a wide range of settings.
The beta-testing phase is aimed at a broad professional audience, including policymakers, healthcare workers, researchers and civil society groups.
WHO said the tool can help users quickly access up-to-date evidence, find sources for academic work and verify information on sexual and reproductive health and rights.
Examples of questions it can answer include the latest violence against women data in Oceania for women aged 15 to 49, recommendations on managing diabetes during pregnancy, and whether PrEP and contraception can be used at the same time. PrEP is medicine used to reduce the risk of getting HIV.
WHO added that the system will be updated regularly as new HRP materials are published and includes a feedback loop so users can flag gaps in the information provided.
The launch comes amid wider concern about misinformation in sexual and reproductive health.
A 2025 scoping review found that misinformation in digital spaces is a systemic issue that can undermine human rights, reinforce discriminatory social norms and exclude marginalised voices.
The review also said misinformation can affect health systems by shaping provider knowledge and practice, disrupting service delivery and creating barriers to equitable care.
WHO said ChatHRP is intended to give users streamlined access to reliable information as a counter to “algorithms, opinions, or misinformation”.
Wellness
Women’s HealthX unveils Northwell Health, Corewell Health, Biogen & more to headline Chronic Disease stage

Women’s HealthX has announced its lineup of healthcare trailblazers speaking on Chronic Disease Management, alongside other specialisations including Fertility, Sexual Health, Maternity, Menopause and Cognitive Health, taking a holistic approach to women’s health.
It will bring together 750+ leaders across pharma, health systems, and innovation to address one of the most urgent and underexamined challenges in healthcare; the sex difference gap in data and evidence.
Since cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death among women globally, and autoimmune and neurological conditions affect women at significantly higher rates, Women’s HealthX will home in on chronic disease management with 17+ sessions spotlighting case studies and lessons learned.
The Chronic Disease Management Stage at Women’s HealthX responds directly to this gap, convening senior decision makers and innovators to explore how sex specific science, digital health, and new care models can reshape outcomes for women.
Attending pharma & healthcare organisations include:
- Tracy Sims, Executive Director, Cardiometabolic Health, Eli Lilly
- Adrian Kielhorn, Senior Director, Global Head HEOR Neurology, Alexion Pharmaceuticals
- Lauren Powell, Head of Health Equity and Clinical Innovation, Biogen
- Amy Kao, SVP, Head of Neuroscience and Immunology Research, EMD Serono
- Stella Vnook, Executive Chair and CEO, Kaida Biopharma
- Amanda Borsky, Director, Clinical Research, Northwell Health
- Lacey McIntosh, Division Chief, Oncologic and Molecular Imaging, UMass Memorial Medical Center
- Nicole Turck, Vice President Operations, Women’s Health, Corewell Health
- Mette Dyhrberg, CEO, Autoimmune Registry
- Lyn Agostinelli, Principal Consultant, Halloran Consulting Group
Sessions addressing the real gaps in women’s chronic care
The agenda features a series of high impact sessions tackling the structural and scientific gaps in women’s health:
- Improving outcomes in obesity through evidence based person centered care: Eli Lilly
- Tackling sex based health inequities by breaking down barriers and bias: Alexion Pharmaceuticals
- Close the health equity gap in women’s health by improving how autoimmune diseases are diagnosed, treated and managed: Autoimmune Registry
- How a GYN only care model is driving faster access to gynecological care: Corewell Health
- Transforming early detection in ovarian cancer: new pathways to accuracy, safety, and better outcomes: UMass Memorial Medical Center
Panel discussions include:
- Why chronic disease looks different in women and why health systems haven’t adapted: Biogen, Kaida Biopharma, EMD Serono
- How can we better engage with our customers: Northwell Health, Halloran Consulting Group
Health equity starts here. REGISTER YOUR PLACE
Why This Matters Now
Women’s HealthX positions chronic disease not just as a clinical challenge, but as a critical frontier for innovation, investment, and system redesign.
From AI powered monitoring and digital therapeutics to real world data and integrated care pathways, the stage highlights where meaningful progress is already being made and where the biggest opportunities lie.
For the FemTech ecosystem, this represents a pivotal moment: aligning technology, clinical insight, and commercial strategy to finally close the long standing data and care gaps in women’s health.
About Women’s HealthX
Women’s HealthX is where the transformation of women’s health begins at its true foundation: data, science, and evidence.
It’s the leading event dedicated to closing the sex difference data gap and accelerating breakthroughs through science driven, real world case studies.
Taking place on December 3 to 4, 2026 in Boston, USA, the exhibition will bring together more than 750 healthcare leaders, including clinicians, payers, employers, investors, and policymakers.
Seven different stages with 150+ expert speakers taking an holistic approach to women’s health. From fertility, maternity, sexual health, cognitive health, menopause and chronic disease, we address care at every stage of a woman’s life.
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