Lymphedema is a chronic condition which may be inherited (primary) or caused by injury to the lymphatic vessels (secondary). It is often-ignored and misunderstood condition but affects up to 250 million people throughout the world. Cancer survivors run a lifelong risk of secondary lymphedema, a disease with no known cure which is caused by damage to or removal of the lymph nodes because of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy and characterized by swelling due to a marked accumulation of fluid in the limb. Although most cancer survivors developing secondary lymphoedema do so within the first three years following treatment, there is no standardized protocol for monitoring patients nor are there efficient, cost-effective methods for early detection of lymphedema. Diagnostic methods are highly inaccurate, can only detect the disease at an advanced and potentially irreversible stage, greatly decreasing patients’ quality-of-life and increasing healthcare costs. This project reviewed the technical and business feasibility of Lymphit. The first solution able to track the lymphatic activity and detect lymphedema at the earliest (sub-clinical) stage.