Healthcare has always had a paperwork problem, and not the kind you can ignore until it goes away. We’re talking fax machines, PDFs stacked like Jenga towers, and medical histories buried so deep it makes you wonder if the system was designed to keep patients waiting. Predoc, a New York-based AI-native platform, is making sure that ends. The company just announced $30 million in combined Series A and seed funding, a raise that feels less like a cash infusion and more like a jailbreak for health information management. The round was led by Base10 Partners, joined by Northzone, ENIAC Ventures, ERA Ventures, and angel firepower from the founders of Flatiron Health, Datavant, Thirty Madison, plus former Blackstone CTO Bill Murphy. When that crew piles in, you know the industry has a problem worth solving.
Founded in 2022 as meMR Health before rebranding in 2024, Predoc is led by CEO Nishant Hari, whose mission is cutting friction out of the most sluggish workflows in healthcare. Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kaushal Kulkarni brings a rare mix of Columbia engineering and neuro-ophthalmology expertise, a perspective that bridges human vision and system design. CTO Alex Daniels brings global engineering leadership with fluency across continents and codebases. And with VP of Product Hannelle Fares recently joining from Evernow, BCG, and GE Healthcare, the leadership team is stacked with people who’ve built systems that actually scale.
This isn’t theory. Predoc reached $500,000 revenue in its first six months, then grew 700 percent year-over-year. Customers like The Oncology Institute, serving nearly two million patients, cut record retrieval times by 75 percent. Revival Research, a clinical research group, went from waiting weeks or months to just 2.6 days. Predoc’s platform automates record retrieval, classification, and analysis across every format, trimming costs by half compared to legacy vendors. The difference is night and day; instead of drowning in faxes and PDFs, providers get structured insights with every data point cited back to source.
The opportunity is enormous. The top five service providers earn about $2 billion a year but only cover the top ten percent of the market. That leaves the other ninety percent underserved, a gap Predoc is stepping into with clinically trained AI and seamless integration that fits existing workflows. It is not another add-on. It is infrastructure, built to scale across oncology, research networks, and virtual care without forcing yet another costly system overhaul.

