
Commons Clinic has closed a $26 million Series B funding round to launch its Wholebody multi-specialty care platform, which integrates women’s health services alongside cardiovascular, metabolic, and oncology care. The Los Angeles-based company’s total funding now exceeds $60 million.
RA Capital led the round, with participation from Floating Point, SteelSky Ventures, Time BioVentures, and Courtside Ventures. The funding supports expansion beyond the company’s established musculoskeletal specialty into comprehensive preventive care across multiple health domains.
The Wholebody platform combines advanced diagnostic technologies with specialist-led prevention and intervention, targeting early detection across women’s health, cardiometabolic wellness, chronic pain, and preventive oncology.
“Specialty healthcare too often begins after prevention fails. Patients lack timely access to specialized clinical expertise, leaving conditions to worsen over time before they receive treatment,” said Nick Aubin, co-founder and CEO of Commons Clinic.
For women’s health, Commons Clinic’s approach includes genetic screening capabilities that can identify BRCA gene mutations, prompting preventive interventions such as prophylactic mastectomy performed in the company’s surgery centers. This integration of diagnostic capabilities with direct surgical intervention represents a vertically integrated model designed to accelerate care pathways.
Board-certified cardiologist Dr. Jenica Ortega will lead the Wholebody program, with specific responsibility for building cardiac, metabolic, bariatric, and women’s health service lines.
“We’re applying that same playbook to the entire body, extending our specialty care model into metabolic, cardiac, cancer, and women’s health,” said Dr. Ben Schwartz, SVP of Care Services at Commons Clinic.
The platform provides up to three specialty consultations through Commons Clinic’s national expert network and offers priority placement into vetted primary care partnerships. Commons Clinic draws inspiration from established institutions like Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic, aiming to create a modern equivalent that integrates advanced technology with physician-led specialty care.