Partner With Diagnostic Detectives Network
Diagnostic Detectives Network helps medical practices and trusted client advisors support people facing serious, complex, rare, or ambiguous medical decisions. We assemble independent panels of precisely matched academic specialists, usually 3 to 10+ experts, and deliver one structured written report that maps the realistic options, disagreements, reasoning, and medical references.
DDN is complementary to the client's existing physicians and advisors. We do not replace treating doctors, provide emergency care, prescribe, or create a patient-physician relationship. We help clients ask better questions, understand the decision landscape, and identify the right expertise worldwide.
What your client receives
- A confidential, remote expert-opinion process based on existing records, imaging, pathology, and the client's decision question.
- A panel selected through worldwide medical literature and specialist-network research, not through a fixed hospital roster.
- Independent written input from each expert, synthesized into one report that can exceed 50 pages for complex cases.
- Transparent handling of disagreement: where experts differ, why they differ, and what tradeoffs matter.
- Anonymity and discretion where appropriate; records are shared with experts in de-identified form when possible.
How working together works
You can introduce DDN when a client needs independent medical expertise beyond a single-institution second opinion. We first assess fit, scope, urgency, and the practical question. If DDN is appropriate, the client engages us directly.
We do not pay referral fees to physicians or regulated advisors, and we do not accept treatment commissions from doctors, hospitals, or clinics. Our role is independent research-grade medical information and expert-opinion coordination.
Practice-preview offer
For a medical practice, family office, law firm, or advisory team considering whether DDN fits its clients, Dr. Anton Titov can review one anonymized scenario at a high level and explain how DDN would think about panel construction, expertise matching, likely timeline, and whether the case is a good fit.
This preview is not medical advice and does not create a patient-physician relationship. It is a way to understand the DDN process before introducing a client.
Founder
Diagnostic Detectives Network was founded by Dr. Anton Titov, MD, PhD, MBA. His background includes neurosurgery residency at Brigham and Women's Hospital / Harvard Medical School, a PhD from The Rockefeller University in the laboratory of Nobel laureate Gunter Blobel, and an MBA from Harvard Business School.
DDN builds on more than 100 expert medical interviews and a global network of academic specialists across oncology, cardiology, neurology, surgery, fertility, prevention, and other complex fields.
Start a partner conversation
You will receive a personal reply from Dr. Titov within one business day.
- Email: support@diagnosticdetectives.com
- Client inquiry form: Start a confidential inquiry
FAQ
Does DDN pay referral fees?
No. DDN does not pay referral fees to physicians or regulated advisors, and it does not accept treatment commissions from doctors, hospitals, or clinics.
Does DDN compete with the client's existing doctors?
No. DDN is complementary. We provide independent research-grade medical information and expert-opinion coordination so the client can have a better conversation with treating physicians.
What kinds of clients are a fit?
Clients facing serious, complex, rare, ambiguous, or cross-disciplinary medical decisions are usually the best fit. Examples include cancer treatment choices, surgery decisions, rare diagnoses, conflicting recommendations, fertility questions, and prevention strategy for high-risk families.
Is this telemedicine?
No. DDN is not a clinic, hospital, emergency service, or telemedicine provider. We do not diagnose, treat, prescribe, or create a patient-physician relationship.
Can a partner stay involved?
Yes, if the client wants that. Some advisors simply make the introduction; others help the client organize records, clarify the decision question, or join process calls.
How should we introduce a client?
Send a short note with the diagnosis or decision area, country or region, urgency, and what the client is trying to decide. Do not send private medical records until DDN confirms the appropriate intake path.