LeptonX tools are built to help you understand your own medical record and arrive at your appointments prepared. How you use them matters as much as what they show.
The most important conversations about your health happen between you and your physician. LeptonX helps you arrive at them prepared.
When a tool surfaces something — a gap in testing, an older result, a sample that wasn't profiled — the right response is not suspicion. It is inquiry. There is very often a sound clinical reason behind what you see, and understanding that reason is the win, regardless of what the answer turns out to be. Ask not to challenge, but to understand. Sometimes the act of asking surfaces something genuinely worth a second look; far more often it simply brings you and your physician onto the same page. Both outcomes are good.
These tools do not decide anything. They organize what already exists in your record and surface relevant, reputable research so that you can ask sharper questions. You walk in with clarity, not conclusions — prepared to participate in your care rather than to direct it.
When you arrive understanding your own history, your physician can spend less time establishing context and more time on the decisions that matter. Being prepared is not adversarial. It is a form of respect — for your physician's time, and for your own role in your care.
These tools exist to support one of the most important relationships in your care — the one between you and your physician. It is worth holding a few things in mind as you use them.
Physicians practice under a demanding standard of ethics and carry caseloads most of us never see — many patients, each with a complex story, each needing real attention and judgment. They bring years of training and genuine dedication to that work. And like all of us, they carry it alongside their own private lives and challenges, often entirely unseen.
So when these tools raise a question — a gap, an older marker, an untested sample — bring it the way you would want a hard question brought to you: humbly, respectfully, and with the assumption of good faith. Uncertainty and anxiety about your own case are completely natural. They are not a reason to interrogate; they are a reason to ask with care.
A good question, asked with respect, is not a challenge to your physician's judgment — it is an invitation to understand it together.
The aim is never to put your physician on the defensive. It is to arrive as a partner: informed, engaged, and working toward exactly the same thing they are — your health.
LeptonX tools inventory and organize what is already in your medical record, and surface relevant public research as questions. They do not interpret your results, predict outcomes, rank therapies, or recommend treatment. Interpretation is your physician's domain — always.
A gap the tool shows you may already have been considered, addressed, or resolved in a way that simply is not reflected in the records it can see. This is precisely why the right posture is to ask rather than assume. The absence of something in your record is the beginning of a question, never the end of one.
A marker from years ago may not reflect your situation today. A test run on a limited sample may carry cautions the laboratory itself recorded. The tools show you these caveats plainly — but only your physician can weigh what they mean for you.
When a tool shows how your record aligns with a clinical trial's requirements, it is preparing you for a conversation — not telling you whether you qualify. Eligibility is decided by physicians and trial coordinators who can see the full picture, including everything no record can capture.
Informed, engaged, and humble. That is how these tools are meant to be used — and it is how the best conversations about your health begin.
LeptonX tools are intended to help patients and families understand and organize their own medical information and prepare for conversations with their care team. They do not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and are not a substitute for professional medical judgment. Always consult your physician regarding your care. ■ Patent Pending — U.S. Application No. 64/000,111