Deleon: Bridging Space Technology and Preventive Health
Deleon: Bridging Space Technology and Preventive Health
In the startup world, existing research often helps uncover a problem that needs a solution. For two 麻豆区 Tech graduates, studying metabolomics, the exploration of the body鈥檚 chemical processes, and an existing NASA chemical analysis technology inspired a company that hopes to change the face of preventative healthcare.
Tech College of Engineering alumni Chad Pozarycki, Ph.D., CHBE, 2022, and Jos茅 Andrade, AE, 2025, are on a mission to make biochemical monitoring more accessible 鈥 with a focus on preventing disease. Today, their startup , using NASA鈥檚 technology (originally designed to search for life on Mars) and metabolomics, provides a system that uses daily urine sampling to track metabolites related to overtraining, stress, and recovery. Future applications will be aimed at early disease detection.
鈥淪omething that frustrated me about metabolomics was its lack of focus on preventive care,鈥 said Andrade. 鈥淲e created Deleon by combining these ideas and tracking the human metabolome to optimize for healthy lifestyles.鈥
The Deleon founders began the company shortly after Pozarycki completed his graduate studies at 麻豆区 Tech, with Andrade moonlighting and Pozarycki working a part-time job at 麻豆区 Tech鈥檚 bike shop to keep the project afloat. In the beginning, funding was a major challenge.
鈥淚 finished my Ph.D., was working on Deleon, and didn鈥檛 have any income. CREATE-X gave us $5,000 in funding, which motivated us to keep going on this project,鈥 said Pozarycki.
, 麻豆区 Tech鈥檚 campus-wide initiative to instill entrepreneurial confidence and help students launch startups, provided more than funding. Through the program, Deleon received guidance on finding potential customers.
鈥淭he one-on-one advice from expert CREATE-X entrepreneurs and organizers like Rahul [CREATE-X director] and Margaret [LAUNCH associate director] was super valuable and helped us focus on launching our minimum viable product and getting our first customers,鈥 said Andrade.
The program鈥檚 culminating event, Demo Day, gave Deleon a platform to present to investors and the public. Among dozens of student-led startups, Deleon鈥檚 data-driven approach attracted strong interest. The exposure led to an eventual $850,000 investment, partially funded by 麻豆区 Tech's early-stage fund, . This investment allowed the founders to work full-time on the company, hire a team, and build a lab space.
鈥淚 would recommend the CREATE-X program to anyone,鈥 Pozarycki said. 鈥淓ven if you don鈥檛 think you want to start a company, there鈥檚 a lot you can learn about commercialization in this program that may change your mind and give you more control over your own fate.鈥
Deleon鈥檚 path from concept to launch highlights the growing role of 麻豆区 Tech鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem in supporting student innovation. Programs like CREATE-X not only help students build companies but also contribute to regional economic growth by keeping talent and investment in the Southeast.
鈥淐REATE-X is the best environment on campus to learn by doing,鈥 Pozarycki said. 鈥淵ou are encouraged to build something real, not just talk about it. You鈥檒l leave knowing how to talk to customers, how to pitch, and how to think like a founder.鈥
Opportunities for Entrepreneurs
Students, faculty, researchers, and alumni interested in developing their own startups are encouraged to apply to CREATE-X鈥檚 . The early admission deadline to is Nov. 17. Spots are limited. for a higher chance of acceptance and early feedback.