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He fled Iran for the American dream, became a millionaire, and could have retired—instead, he built the health tech that saved his father from cancer

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He fled Iran for the American dream, became a millionaire, and could have retired—instead, he built the health tech that saved his father from cancer

Ardy Arianpour fled Tehran at six years old with his family and four suitcases. Forty years later, he’s helped scale a $1 billion acquisition, saved his father’s life with his own technology, and built a health data platform sitting on 150 million patient records.

The 46-year-old founder and CEO of Seqster grew up in San Diego, the city his family landed in when they escaped war in Tehran in 1986. 

Growing up, while most teenagers were working at lemonade stands and ice cream parlours, Arianpour was working at the Salk Institute and teaching himself to trade stocks online by 16. In 1998, he featured in Time Magazine for making big returns as a teen broker and investing in his pension, all while still in high school.

But his big break didn’t come from a stock windfall. After studying biological sciences at university and then getting an MBA from the Marshall Goldsmith School of Management, he spent years scaling Ambry Genetics as its senior vice president, where he led its $1 billion acquisition by Konica Minolta—and earned so much in the process he could have retired.

“After my success at Ambry, I honestly didn’t have to work anymore and could have sat on a beach for the rest of my life,” Arianpour tells Fortune. Instead, he founded Seqster.

The idea was straightforward: critical patient data exists everywhere in health care, but it’s fragmented across systems and almost never in one place when it matters most. What he didn’t expect was how quickly it would become personal. Shortly after launching in 2016, his father was diagnosed with colon cancer. Using Seqster, Arianpour pulled together his father’s scattered medical records, assembled a team of specialists, and had a treatment plan in place within six hours. His father was in surgery within a week.

“That’s when it became clear,” he adds. “This wasn’t just a data platform. It was a way to turn fragmented information into actionable, life-saving insight.”

It happened again when his wife experienced severe heart rhythm episodes and was told that specialist care could take nine months. He used Seqster to consolidate her records, accelerate access to the right doctors, and secure surgery within weeks. 

Today, Seqster sits on 150 million patient records, integrates with more than 20 electronic health record systems, and counts Fortune 500 companies worth between $5 billion and $300 billion among its customers. In the........

© Fortune