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3.5 Million USD Investment To Advance Precision Medicine In Africa Launched At The World Health Summit, Nairobi

African man speaking at health summit about precision medicine funding.

South-South partnership backed by production-scale sequencing technology marks a new chapter for  African-led genomics, beginning with Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire 

Biolinx Africa, YTO Foundation and Nextgen Molecular Lab have  announced a landmark South-South partnership backed by a $3.5 million investment by Equity Bank  in Kenya, and the acquisition of a NovaSeq X Plus sequencing platform. The partners stated that the  collaboration will meaningfully expand genomics capacity and bring precision medicine closer to  African populations, starting with Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire. 

The partnership was unveiled during a closed high-level roundtable titled “From Dialogue to  Delivery: Building Africa’s Future in Genomics and Precision Medicine,” convened on the margins of  the World Health Summit Regional Meeting 2026 in Nairobi, Kenya. The session brought together  genomics researchers, government regulators, development finance partners, investors and global  health organizations to confront the barriers holding back sustainable genomics infrastructure in  Africa and to define practical next steps. 

The first phase of the collaboration will focus on building sequencing capacity, supporting African led genomic data generation and analysis, and establishing a 24-month implementation roadmap  anchored in Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire. The NovaSeq X Plus platform, which Illumina describes as a  production-scale system for large-scale sequencing applications, will be a central pillar of that  infrastructure buildout. 

Africa holds the greatest human genetic diversity in the world, yet African populations remain  significantly underrepresented in global genomic studies and reference databases. This gap has real  clinical consequences, including inaccurate diagnoses, misinterpreted findings, and treatments that  are less effective for the populations that need them the most. At the same time, genomics and  precision medicine are gaining stronger policy traction across the continent. AUDA-NEPAD has  identified genomics as one of Africa’s scientific priorities; Africa CDC reports that six countries have  already launched national genomics strategies, with 11 more having finalized plans pending launch.  In February 2026, the WHO Executive Board adopted a resolution on precision medicine calling for  investment in genomics, pharmacogenomics, laboratory infrastructure, genomic databases and  bioinformatics.

“Genomics in Africa has to move from conversation to capability. This partnership is about putting  infrastructure, investment and African scientific leadership behind a practical delivery agenda.” — Dr. Robert Karanja, Founder and Executive Director, Biolinx Africa 

“African populations remain underrepresented in the genomic landscape that increasingly shapes  prevention, diagnosis, treatment and research priorities. This partnership is about building local  capacity and generating data that are more relevant to African patients and can be applied to improve  their health. Better date, better care.” 

— Prof. David Tea Okou, Clinical Molecular Geneticist and Founder, YTO Foundation 

“We are seeing how pharmacogenomics can help explain differences in treatment response and support  more personalized cancer care. The next step is to bring these tools closer to routine clinical decision making and, over time, into treatment pathways and coverage discussions.” 

— Dr. George Michuki, Chief Executive Officer, Nextgen Molecular Lab 

The announcement also reflects the power of African scientific networks in catalyzing cross-border  collaboration. Dr. Karanja and Prof. Tea Okou are both members of the African Voices of Science  (AVoS) cohort, an initiative launched by Speak Up Africa in 2020 to amplify African researchers and  health experts and to help shift policy and investment toward African-led health solutions. It was  through AVoS that the two leaders first connected — making this partnership a direct product of the  network’s convening power. 

“When we launched African Voices of Science, we believed that bringing together the right African  scientists and giving them a platform to speak with authority would lead to exactly this kind of outcome.  The partnership between Biolinx Africa, YTO Foundation and Nextgen Molecular Lab is a powerful  demonstration of what happens when we invest in African scientific leadership.” 

— Fara Ndiaye, Co-Founder and Deputy Director, Speak Up Africa 

The partners describe the initiative as a platform for long-term collaboration in genomics and  precision medicine, with Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire as the initial anchor countries and an ambition to  expand across the continent as infrastructure and partnerships mature. 

ABOUT BIOLINX AFRICA 

Biolinx Africa is a biotech venture studio and innovation catalyst dedicated to building Africa’s  bioeconomy. It works at the intersection of science, investment and entrepreneurship to accelerate  the development and deployment of health innovations across the continent. 

ABOUT YTO FOUNDATION 

YTO Foundation works to improve health and well-being through biomedical research and scientific  innovation. Founded by Prof. David Tea Okou, it is committed to advancing African-led science and  building the research capacity needed to address the continent’s most pressing health challenges. 

ABOUT NEXTGEN MOLECULAR LAB 

NextGen Molecular Lab is Kenya’s first private whole genome sequencing platform. It generates  clinically actionable pharmacogenomics reports and cancer mutation profiles that support precision 

treatment decisions. The organization monetizes high‑resolution genomic insights through advanced  diagnostic services and targeted research and innovation partnerships with global  biopharmaceutical companies. By processing genomic data locally, NextGen Molecular Lab enables  clinicians to access rapid, decision‑ready reports—transforming complex genomic data into  immediate clinical value while positioning Kenya as a hub for scalable African genomic innovation. 

ABOUT AFRICAN VOICES OF SCIENCE (AVOS) 

Established in 2020 and powered by Speak Up Africa, AVoS brings together leading scientists,  researchers, and policy advocates from Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, and Côte d’Ivoire to amplify  African perspectives, influence policy, and drive investment in African-led health solutions.  www.speakupafrica.org 

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