Rea developed the first self-test for preterm birth risk.*
*Currently in clinical validation at Lausanne University Hospital.
Our approach
Every year, one million babies die from complications of preterm birth. Behind each of those numbers is a family that didn't know in time. Those who survive carry consequences that often last a lifetime.
According to the World Health Organization, 75% of these deaths are preventable — if the risk is identified early enough for clinicians to act.
Today, it rarely is. The tests that can identify preterm birth risk have existed for decades, but they require a hospital visit, a clinician, a speculum examination, and hours of waiting. For most women at risk, that means no test at all.
Rea Diagnostics is building a simple, self-collected test that a woman can use at home — without a clinician, without a clinic visit, and without specialized equipment.
The test is designed to indicate whether she is at elevated risk of preterm delivery, to inform the next clinical conversation with her doctor.
How we work, and how we collaborate with clinicians and researchers.
Rea's research began with a question most diagnostics companies never ask: whether clinically validated biomarkers could be detected passively, from a wearable surface, without any active sample collection at all.
At EPFL, in the research group of Professor Carlotta Guiducci, our team engineered biosensors onto flexible substrates capable of detecting cervicovaginal biomarkers in real time. That early work — building a wearable diagnostic surface from first principles — produced the foundational patents and the scientific platform that Rea is built on.
The self-collected swab we are validating today is a deliberate simplification of that platform: a form factor optimised for regulatory clarity, manufacturing scale, and clinical adoption. But the underlying detection capability is broader than a single analyte or a single form factor.
Our first clinical application is a self-collected vaginal swab for preterm birth risk. The test is designed to indicate whether a woman is at elevated risk of preterm delivery, to inform the next clinical conversation with her doctor.
The scientific development of this test has been conducted in collaboration with Professor David Baud, Head of Obstetrics at Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV). Professor Baud and his team have been scientific partners from the earliest research phase and remain so today.
Most diagnostic tests were designed for clinical settings first and patient experience second. We start from the opposite direction: what would make a test a woman actually wants to take, and can take herself, at home?
We are not trying to discover new biology. The biomarkers we work with are known to the field. Our contribution is engineering a sampling and detection approach that makes those signals accessible outside the hospital, while preserving the scientific rigor that makes them meaningful.
Preterm birth is where we begin. But the scientific foundation we are building goes beyond a single assay. Alongside our lead clinical program, Rea holds patented technology for biomarker detection in self-collected samples — a platform that supports ongoing research in maternal-fetal medicine and women's health more broadly.
Much of our work happens in partnership with clinical investigators. We collaborate with maternal-fetal medicine specialists, obstetric teams, and research hospitals on scientific questions that range from single-biomarker validation to multi-analyte research platforms.
For clinical investigators and research hospitals interested in collaborating with Rea, contact science@readiagnostics.com.
Active clinical research and previously presented work from the Rea team.
Rea's research sits at the intersection of biosensor engineering, obstetric medicine, and women's health diagnostics. We work on the scientific questions that determine whether a self-collected diagnostic test can meet the standards required for clinical decision-making.
Rea is conducting clinical research in collaboration with the obstetrics department at Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV).
Peer-reviewed publications and additional conference presentations from the Rea team will be listed here.
For clinical investigators and research hospitals interested in collaborating with Rea, contact science@readiagnostics.com.
Rea Diagnostics is a clinical-stage company developing diagnostic tests for women's health, with a first clinical program in preterm birth. The company is a spin-off of the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), and is based at the EPFL Innovation Park in Lausanne, Switzerland.

MSc Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, University of Bologna. Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe, Science & Healthcare (2022). Two-time founder.
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PhD in microtechnology, EPFL. Expert in biosensors for diagnostic applications.
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Former VP Regulatory Affairs & Quality at Medtronic. Former Head of Global Drug Regulatory Affairs at Novartis.

Professor at EPFL, expert in biosensors for human health.

PhD Biochemistry. Expert in IVD regulatory approvals, quality management systems, and clinical trial site operations.

Head of Obstetrics, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV). Scientific collaborator on Rea's preterm birth research program.
Rea's scientific and commercial development has been supported by competitive grants from leading research foundations and public innovation agencies, and recognised by entrepreneurship programmes across Europe and North America.
We are always interested in meeting scientists, engineers, and clinical and regulatory professionals who share our mission. If you would like to work with us, please contact us at contact@readiagnostics.com.
For students and early-career researchers, we also run an Early Careers Program with master thesis, post-master, and industrial internship tracks.
Women's health has been under-resourced for generations. Our CEO on the diagnostic gap — and what will close it.
Women's health has been under-researched and under-resourced for generations. Many of the tools still in use today were designed decades ago, for a clinical world that looked nothing like the one women live in now.
This has to change. The technology exists. The clinical need is established. What has been missing is focused scientific effort from teams who are willing to build products around women's bodies and women's lives — not around hospital workflows and clinical calendars.
Rea is our contribution to that change. Preterm birth is where we begin, because it is one of the most urgent and solvable diagnostic gaps in the field. It is not where we intend to stop.
Rea Diagnostics co-founder and CEO Loulia Kassem was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe list in the Science & Healthcare category, recognizing her work building diagnostics for women's health.
Read on Forbes →Scientific inquiries, research collaborations, press, and everything in between.
Rea Diagnostics SA
EPFL Innovation Park
1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
Master thesis, post-master, and industrial internship tracks in biosensing, obstetrics, and women's health — working on diagnostic tests that will be used in clinical practice.
Apply to the program →Our Early Careers Program is built for people who want to do serious scientific work, not carry out administrative tasks. Every participant contributes to an active research program, works alongside our scientists and engineers, and leaves with their own piece of work that belongs to them — a master thesis, a patent contribution, a publication, or a foundation for their PhD.
Complete your thesis at Rea on an original research problem in biosensing, diagnostics, or molecular biology. Co-supervised by your home university and a Rea researcher.
A structured research stint between your master's degree and your next step — whether that is a PhD, an industry position, or a full role at Rea.
Shorter, project-scoped placements for students who want industrial research experience alongside their academic program.
Fifteen alumni to date, across three tracks. Researchers have joined us from Switzerland, Italy, France, Spain, and Morocco, and continue their work today in laboratories and companies across Europe and North America.
Some have continued at Rea full-time. Others have gone on to PhDs and academic positions at EPFL and other research institutions in Europe and North America.




We review applications on a rolling basis. Send a short note describing your scientific interests, your availability, and the track you are applying for, along with your CV and a transcript of your most recent academic work.
careers@readiagnostics.com