Built on science, not willpower
Key to Health was founded by physicians who believed weight management deserved better evidence.

Over 70% of U.S. adults are overweight or have obesity. The programs that produce durable results tend to require expensive infrastructure — physicians, coaches, or indefinite medication. The programs that scale tend to lack clinical evidence. We started Key to Health to close that gap.
The science of breath acetone as a biomarker of fat metabolism has been published since the 1960s. What changed is the technology to measure it practically — in a handheld device connected to a smartphone — and our commitment to proving it works through the same standards used to evaluate pharmaceuticals: randomized controlled trials, independent oversight, and peer-reviewed publication.
Team
Founded by physicians and engineers
Ray Wu, MD
Co-founder & CEO
Ray graduated from Weill Cornell Medical College and has published peer-reviewed research in the molecular biology of diabetes and metabolism. He leads Key to Health's product development, clinical research program, and regulatory strategy.
Liane Nakamura
Co-founder
Liane is an experienced engineer and product developer who leads Key to Health's hardware and software development, including the Generation 2 breath sensor and the KEY AI agent.
Milestones
What we've proven so far

What we believe
These principles shape how we build the product and present our evidence.
Our commitments
- Prove it works through gold-standard research — not testimonials
- Present evidence honestly, including limitations
- Build technology that scales without requiring expensive human infrastructure
- Align with established dietary science, not fad diets
- Never claim to treat, cure, or prevent any disease
What we won't do
- Cite studies we haven't verified
- Guarantee individual results
- Make claims that outrun our evidence
- Hide behind vague language like "clinically tested" without specifics
See our evidence
Four published or submitted studies — presented with strengths and limitations.
Clinical evidence