BERKELEY, Calif. — February 12, 2026 — Leads & Copy — Profusa, Inc. (Nasdaq: PFSA) has entered into a know-how agreement with Mayo Clinic to investigate clinical applications of Profusa’s oxygen monitoring technologies for new product development and commercialization.
The collaboration aims to accelerate regulatory approval and commercialization of the Lumee™ wearable continuous tissue oxygen monitoring product.
The companies will seek to develop and commercialize new tethered continuous oxygen monitoring products for high impact clinical applications.
Potential target indications include cardiovascular, renal, multi-organ, and orthopedic applications, among others, where intra-organ postoperative perfusion monitoring has potential to improve clinical outcomes. The collaboration also supports Profusa’s potential commercialization of Lumee oxygen sensing and tissue monitoring technology for critical limb ischemia in the U.S.
Michael Kendrick, M.D., Chair of Department of Surgery at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., said oxygen is essential for cellular metabolism and tissue repair, with lack of sufficient oxygenation impairing wound healing, increasing risk of infection, and contributing to complications common to surgery, such as leakage and anastomotic structure. He added that the collaboration gives them the opportunity to leverage their innovative platform to potentially address unmet clinical challenges, including the ability to monitor beyond subcutaneous tissue.
Ben Hwang, Ph.D., Profusa’s Chairman and CEO, said that following more than a decade of development and over $100 million in investment, their Lumee technology enables continuous, real-time measurement of tissue oxygen directly within the body, which he believes to be a first-of-its-kind, disruptive biochemistry monitoring platform. Hwang added that they are committed to continue to harness their platform technology for innovative solutions that seek to both address large unmet clinical needs and reduce costs for healthcare systems through earlier detection and improved disease management and that they look forward to collaborating with Mayo Clinic for the U.S. commercialization of Lumee for critical limb ischemia, and developing products to address new indications to expand their oxygen tissue monitoring technology’s market and therapeutic reach.
Mayo Clinic has a financial interest in the technology referenced in this press release. Mayo Clinic will use any revenue it receives to support its not-for-profit mission in patient care, education, and research.
Based in Berkeley, Calif., Profusa is a commercial stage digital health company led by visionary scientific founders, an experienced management team and a world-class board of directors in the development of a new generation of tissue-integrated sensors to detect and continuously transmit actionable, medical-grade data for personal and medical use. With its long-lasting, injectable and affordable biosensors and its intelligent data platform, Profusa aims to provide people with a personalized biochemical signature rooted in data that clinicians can trust and rely on.
“LUMEE”, “PROFUSA” and the PROFUSA logo are registered trademarks of Profusa Inc. in the United States, Canada, European Union, China, Japan, South Korea and Australia.
Source: Profusa
