Delivering faster answers to more patients
One integrated diagnostics ecosystem
Mayo Clinic Laboratories provides serious or complex laboratory testing to advance patient care worldwide. For over 50 years, we’ve helped physicians answer the toughest clinical questions with confidence and empowered hospitals to elevate care in their communities. Through one integrated diagnostics ecosystem powered by Mayo Clinic, we deliver trusted, timely answers to patients around the globe.
“We focus on delivering accurate and timely results but also serving as a compass for providers and their patients to be connected to the right therapies no matter where they are in the world.”
William Morice II, M.D., Ph.D., president and CEO, Mayo Clinic Laboratories
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Viral and pharmacogenomic testing help clinicians detect infection early, tailor immunosuppression, and improve long-term outcomes for organ transplant recipients.
Cayuga Medical Center sought to challenge the narrative that a hospital’s lab is an expensive liability by positioning themselves as the laboratory of choice in their area.
UofL Health – UofL Hospital physicians and laboratory scientists faced challenges in the ordering of autoimmune and paraneoplastic panels: duplicate orders that add unnecessary cost and omitted test orders that could provide the key to the right diagnosis for patients.
Controlled substance testing options vary in the details they provide about patient drug use, painting an incomplete picture of usage patterns that can hinder accurate prescription monitoring and treatment outcomes. However, a new comprehensive Controlled Substance Monitoring Panel, developed by the Clinical and Forensic Toxicology Laboratory at Mayo Clinic Laboratories, offers in-depth analysis on more than 70 different prescription medications and illicit substances to provide clinicians with details and interpretations on patients’ controlled substance use lacking in other laboratory assays.
Dendritic cells play a crucial role in the body's immune response. Research has shown that too few of these cells in the blood may signal a defect in innate immunity. Up to this point, however, no clinical test has been available to count dendritic cells.