Incident Score: Analysis & Impact (MEDLANCAR1773312928)
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Rankiteo Score Impact Analysis
Key Highlights From The Incident Analysis
- Timeline of Lancet Laboratories's Breach and lateral movement inside company's environment.
- Overview of affected data sets, including SSNs and PHI, and why they materially increase incident severity.
- How Rankiteo’s incident engine converts technical details into a normalized incident score.
- How this cyber incident impacts Lancet Laboratories Rankiteo cyber scoring and cyber rating.
- Rankiteo’s MITRE ATT&CK correlation analysis for this incident, with associated confidence level.
Full Incident Analysis Transcript
In this Rankiteo incident briefing, we review the Lancet Laboratories breach identified under incident ID MEDLANCAR1773312928.
The analysis begins with a detailed overview of Lancet Laboratories's information like the linkedin page: https://www.linkedin.com/company/lancet-laboratories, the number of followers: 87380, the industry type: Medical Practices and the number of employees: 5137 employees
After the initial compromise, the video explains how Rankiteo's incident engine converts technical details into a normalized incident score. The incident score before the incident was 770 and after the incident was 706 with a difference of -64 which is could be a good indicator of the severity and impact of the incident.
In the next step of the video, we will analyze in more details the incident and the impact it had on Lancet Laboratories and their customers.
Mediclinic Southern Africa recently reported "Cyberattacks on Africa’s Healthcare Sector Escalate, Disrupting Critical Services and Endangering Patients", a noteworthy cybersecurity incident.
Africa’s healthcare systems are under siege as cybercriminals exploit rapid digitization to target hospitals, laboratories, and clinics, crippling operations and exposing sensitive patient data.
The disruption is felt across the environment, affecting hospitals, laboratories and clinics, and exposing sensitive patient data, HR data, medical records, customer data.
Formal response steps have not been shared publicly yet.
The case underscores how teams are taking away lessons such as Cybersecurity must be integrated into resilience planning alongside physical safeguards. Underreporting obscures the full scale of the crisis, and digital transformation in healthcare requires robust security measures to protect patient safety, and recommending next steps like Integrate AI-driven threat detection, Implement phishing-resistant multifactor authentication (MFA) and conditional access and Conduct regular audits of third-party integrations (AI and cloud services).
Finally, we try to match the incident with the MITRE ATT&CK framework to see if there is any correlation between the incident and the MITRE ATT&CK framework.
The MITRE ATT&CK framework is a knowledge base of techniques and sub-techniques that are used to describe the tactics and procedures of cyber adversaries. It is a powerful tool for understanding the threat landscape and for developing effective defense strategies.
MITRE ATT&CK® Correlation Analysis
Rankiteo's analysis has identified several MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques associated with this incident, each with varying levels of confidence based on available evidence. Under the Initial Access tactic, the analysis identified Phishing (T1566) with high confidence (90%), with evidence including phishing listed as attack vector, and aI-powered phishing (4.5x more effective), Valid Accounts (T1078) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating credential abuse listed as attack vector, and Exploit Public-Facing Application (T1190) with moderate to high confidence (70%), with evidence including third-party integrations exploited, and legacy systems as vulnerability. Under the Execution tactic, the analysis identified User Execution (T1204) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating phishing and credential abuse require user interaction. Under the Persistence tactic, the analysis identified Valid Accounts (T1078) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating credential abuse enables persistent access. Under the Privilege Escalation tactic, the analysis identified Valid Accounts (T1078) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating abused credentials likely had elevated privileges. Under the Defense Evasion tactic, the analysis identified Impair Defenses: Disable or Modify Tools (T1562.001) with moderate confidence (60%), supported by evidence indicating underfunded IT teams and legacy systems hinder defenses and Valid Accounts (T1078) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating credential abuse bypasses authentication controls. Under the Credential Access tactic, the analysis identified Brute Force (T1110) with moderate confidence (60%), supported by evidence indicating credential abuse implies possible brute force and Credentials from Password Stores (T1555) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating unencrypted patient records may store credentials. Under the Discovery tactic, the analysis identified Account Discovery (T1087) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating medical records and HR data targeted imply account discovery and Data from Local System (T1005) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating patient records and HR data compromised. Under the Collection tactic, the analysis identified Data from Local System (T1005) with high confidence (90%), supported by evidence indicating sensitive patient data, HR data, medical records compromised and Data from Information Repositories (T1213) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating medical records fetched from healthcare databases. Under the Exfiltration tactic, the analysis identified Exfiltration Over C2 Channel (T1041) with moderate to high confidence (80%), with evidence including data sold on dark web, and medical records exfiltrated and Transfer Data to Cloud Account (T1537) with moderate confidence (60%), supported by evidence indicating third-party integrations and cloud services exploited. Under the Impact tactic, the analysis identified Data Encrypted for Impact (T1486) with high confidence (90%), supported by evidence indicating ransomware attacks with data encryption, Defacement (T1491) with moderate confidence (50%), supported by evidence indicating disrupted critical services imply possible defacement, and Inhibit System Recovery (T1490) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating 40% of ransom payments failed to restore data/operations. These correlations help security teams understand the attack chain and develop appropriate defensive measures based on the observed tactics and techniques.
Sources & References
- Lancet Laboratories Rankiteo Cyber Incident Details: https://www.rankiteo.com/company/lancet-laboratories/incident/MEDLANCAR1773312928
- Lancet Laboratories CyberSecurity Rating page: https://www.rankiteo.com/company/lancet-laboratories
- Lancet Laboratories Rankiteo Cyber Incident Blog Article: https://blog.rankiteo.com/medlancar1773312928-m-tiba-mediclinic-southern-africa-lancet-laboratories-breach-may-2025/
- Lancet Laboratories CyberSecurity Score History: https://www.rankiteo.com/company/lancet-laboratories/history
- Lancet Laboratories CyberSecurity Incident Source: https://www.itnewsafrica.com/2026/03/healthcare-under-attack-why-is-cybersecurity-now-critical/
- Rankiteo A.I CyberSecurity Rating methodology: https://www.rankiteo.com/Images/rankiteo_algo.pdf
- Rankiteo TPRM Scoring methodology: https://static.rankiteo.com/model/rankiteo_tprm_methodology.pdf