A case study on the successful development of a BLE app for a medical technology startup, from idea to challenges to MDR certification.
“Digitalization is not an IT project—it is a business strategy.”
– Björn Groenewold, Managing Director, Groenewold IT Solutions
> Key Takeaway: This case study shows the successful development of a BLE app for industrial IoT applications: from Bluetooth LE device communication through OTA firmware updates to cloud integration for data analysis.
Challenges: unstable BLE connections in harsh environments and device-specific Bluetooth stack differences.
This article is part of our series about [Bluetooth](/leistungen/systemintegration integration) Low Energy. You can find the comprehensive guide here: The ultimate guide to [BLE](/services/system integration) App Development in Germany (2026)
Case Study: Successful development of a BLE app for a medical technology startup
Short: Theory is important, but nothing convinces more than an example from practice.
Theory is important, but nothing convinces more than an example from practice. In this case study, we (anonymized) describe the path of a German medical technology startup that has developed an innovative wearable for monitoring vital data.
The project exemplarily demonstrates the typical challenges and success factors in the development of a BLE application in the demanding healthcare sector.
The starting situation
Short: The startup had a vision: a small, inconspicuous wearable that continuously measures vital data such as heart rate and oxygen saturation and transmits it safely to a mobile app.
The startup had a vision: a small, inconspicuous wearable that continuously measures vital data such as heart rate and oxygen saturation and transmits it safely to a mobile app.
The app should visualize the data and automatically trigger an alarm at critical values – both in the patient and in the attending physician. The product should be certified as a medical product of Class IIa, which required compliance with the strict Medical Device Regulation (MDR).
The challenges
Short: The project presented the team with several complex challenges:
The project presented the team with several complex challenges:
Reliable BLE connection: The connection between the wearable and the smartphone had to be extremely stable. A connection termination during a critical measurement was unacceptable.
** Energy efficiency:** The wearable should pay at least one week with a battery charge, despite continuous data transmission.
Data security: Health data is highly sensitive. The entire communication had to be encrypted at the end and correspond to the requirements of the GDPR.
MDR certification: The software (both firmware and app) had to be developed and documented according to IEC 62304 to obtain approval as a medical product.
The solution
Short: The startup decided to collaborate with an experienced BLE App developer who had already successfully launched several medical devices.
The startup decided to collaborate with an experienced BLE App developer who had already successfully launched several medical devices. The development process was divided into several phases:
Proof of Concept (PoC): In a first phase, a PoC was created with a standard development board to validate the basic feasibility and to define the requirements for the GATT profile.
Parallele development: firmware and app development ran parallel, with regular integration tests to ensure that both sides play together perfectly.
Safety from the outset: Security mechanisms (LE Secure Connections, Encryption, Safe Authentication) have been integrated into architecture from the outset, not subsequently added.
**Document as part of the
Method note: External statistics refer to published industry and official data (Bitkom, Destatis) where not otherwise attributed. Company-specific figures: Groenewold IT, 2026.
References and further reading
Short: The following independent references complement the topics in this article:
The following independent references complement the topics in this article:
- Bitkom – German digital industry association
- German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI)
- European Commission – Digital strategy
- MDN Web Docs (Mozilla)
- W3C – World Wide Web Consortium
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About the author
Managing Director of Groenewold IT Solutions GmbH and Hyperspace GmbH
For over 15 years Björn Groenewold has been developing software solutions for the mid-market. He is Managing Director of Groenewold IT Solutions GmbH and Hyperspace GmbH. As founder of Groenewold IT Solutions he has successfully supported more than 250 projects – from legacy modernisation to AI integration.
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