The newly launched app, Supplemate by Remedy, aims to give consumers the power to better align their supplements with their health goals, create a more transparent market, and support science-led innovation, according to creator Pawel Gruszczynski, owner of pharma and nutrition consultancy Remedy.
The tech-savvy entrepreneur said the idea for the innovation came to him during a panel discussion at his Remedy NutraFood conference in October 2025, attended by CDMOs and ingredient suppliers.
“I asked panellists about key factors that will change the industry. Matts Johnasen, CEO of Aker Biomarine, said AI is giving everyone the ability to read scientific papers and, because of that, there will be a greater demand for ingredients that are backed by clinical trials.”
Realizing this could be a game changer for the industry, Gruszczynski began working on software that could turn Johnasen’s prediction into a reality.
He was particularly excited that greater transparency around scientific backing could reduce companies’ reliance on EFSA approved health claims.
“I want us to be less dependent on EFSA and give more credibility to suppliers that put their work into creating clinical trials to back their products,” Gruszczynski said.
He launched a beta version of SuppleMate by Remedy in January this year (2026) and the finished version was launched this month (April).
“The app will use the user’s IP address in order to provide appropriate information related to legal status and authorized health claims. It asks what the user wants to achieve in terms of health goals and reads the ingredients and gives a score out of ten as to how well aligned the product is with the user’s desired outcome.”
Not only will the app analyze the scientific backing and regulatory status of the ingredients but it will check the dose and the potential interactions between ingredients to ensure those listed can actually provide the desired benefits.
It will further consider the other supplements in the user’s stack and flag any issues of supplement interactions, as well as recommended ideal intake timing.
“I am marketing it B2B right now because that’s the world I know best,” aid the entrepreneur. “I work with nutraceutical companies all the time and they tell me this is very useful for their product evaluations, to see if the ingredient they are using is the right one for their product.”
He added: “If companies can see the utility of the app then they will recommend it to their consumers, which will be good for the industry as a whole.”
The app is available on App Store for iPhone or can be accessed by anyone via a web browser.
Users get three free credits before paying-per-use.
“I didn’t want to create another subscription service because I hate how many there are taking money out your account even when you don’t use the service. I rather ensure users are only charged for what they use.”
NutraFood Poland enters industry event calendar
Gruszczyński launched NutraFood Poland last year in order to bring together CDMOs from across Central and Eastern Europe with global ingredient suppliers.
After a successful first event in Gdańsk in October 2025, the next central event is planned to take place in the same venue this October, alongside smaller satellite events across the region.




