Mantis Biotech is making ‘digital twins’ of humans to help solve medicine’s data availability problem
Mantis takes disparate sources of data to make synthetic datasets that can be used to build so-called "digital twins" of the human body, representing anatomy, physiology and behavior.
Large language models trained on vast datasets could speed genomics research, streamline clinical documentation, improve real-time diagnostics, support clinical decision-making, accelerate drug discovery, and even generate synthetic data to advance experiments.
But their promise to transform biomedical research often runs into a bottleneck: beyond the structured data healthcare relies on, these models struggle in edge cases like rare diseases and unusual conditions, where reliable, representative data is scarce.
New York-based Mantis Biotech claims it’s developing the solution to fill this data availability gap. The company’s platform integrates disparate sources of data to make synthetic datasets that can be used to build so-called “digital twins” of the human body: physics-based, predictive models of anatomy, physiology, and behavior.
The company is pitching these digital twins for use in data aggregation and analysis. These digital twins could be used for studying and testing new medical procedures, training surgical robots, and simulating and predicting medical issues or even patterns of behavior. For example, a sports team could predict the likelihood of a specific NFL player developing an Achilles heel injury based on their recent performance, training load, diet, and how long they’ve been active, Mantis’ founder and CEO Georgia Witchel explained to TechCrunch in a recent interview.
To build these twins, Mantis’ platform first takes data from a variety of sources such as textbooks, motion capture cameras, biometric sensors, training logs and medical imaging. Then, it uses an LLM-based system to route, validate, and synthesize the various data streams, and runs all that information through a physics engine to create high-fidelity renders of that dataset, which can then be used to train predictive models.
“We’re able to take all these disparate data sources and then turn them into predictive models for how people are going to perform. So anytime you want to predict how a human being is going to be performing, that is a really good use case for our technology,” Witchel said.
The physics engine layer is key here, Witchel told TechCrunch, because it helps the platform enhance the available information by grounding the generated synthetic data and realistically modeling the physics of anatomy.
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“If I asked you to do hand-pose estimation for someone who is missing a finger, it would be really, really hard, because there are no publicly available datasets of labeled hand positions of someone who is missing a finger. We could generate that dataset really, really easily, because we just take our physics model and we say, remove finger X, regenerate model,” she said.
Since Mantis’ platform fills gaps in data sources, Witchel thinks there’s potential for it to be used widely across the biomedical industry, where information on procedures or patients can be difficult to access, is unstructured or siloed into various sources. She stressed edge cases or rare diseases, where data is hard to obtain since there are often ethical and regulatory constraints around including patients’ data in public datasets, or using it for training AI models.
“You know how when you see a three-year-old running around, and they have a Barbie, and they’re holding it by one leg and smashing it against a table? I want people to have that mindset with our digital twins,” she said. “I think that’s going to open up people to this idea that humans can be tested on when you’re using virtual humans. I feel currently, people operate with the exact opposite mindset, which totally makes sense, because people’s privacy should be respected. In fact, I don’t really think people’s data should be exploited at all, especially when you have these digital twins.”
For now, Mantis has seen success in professional sports, presumably because there is a need to model high-performing athletes. Witchel said one of the startup’s main clients is an NBA team.
“We create these digital representations of the athletes, where it basically shows here’s how this athlete has jumped, not just today, but for every single day in the past year, and here’s how their jumps are changing over time compared to the amount that they’re sleeping, or compared to how many times they lift their arms above their head,” she explained.
The startup recently raised $7.4 million in seed funding led by Decibel VC, with participation from Y Combinator, a few angel investors, and Liquid 2. The funding will be used for hiring, advertising, marketing and go-to-market functions.
The next step for Mantis, Witchel said, is to continue building out the tech, and eventually release the platform to the general public, targeting preventative healthcare. The company is also working to cater to pharmaceutical labs and researchers working on FDA trials, aiming to deliver insights into how patients are responding to treatments.
Ram is a financial and tech reporter and editor. He covered North American and European M&A, equity, regulatory news and debt markets at Reuters and Acuris Global, and has also written about travel, tourism, entertainment and books.
You can contact or verify outreach from Ram by emailing ram.iyer@techcrunch.com .
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