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DTU participates in an 8 million euro European consortium to decentralize CAR-T cell therapy and improve hospital workflows

DTU participates in the European consortium together with 17 organizations.

DTU partner in EU consortium
DTU Professor Jens O. Brunner is partner in the EU Consortium (back row second from left). Photo: Johannes Krzeslack

Industry & clinical leaders: Fresenius SE & Co. KGaA (Coordinator) (DE), Helios Hospital Berlin-Buch (DE), QS Instituto (ES), Fenwal Inc. (US), Cellix Ltd. (IE), Charles River (DE), Pro-Liance Global Solutions (DE), TQ Therapeutics (DE), Philips Electronics Nederland B.V. (NL).

Academic & research institutions: Fraunhofer IESE (DE), Fraunhofer IZI (DE), Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (DE), Technical University of Denmark (DK), Frankfurt School of Finance & Management (DE), European Society for Blood & Marrow Transplantation (SP), Bar-Ilan University (IL), University of Glasgow (UK), University of Navarra (ES).

EASYGEN is a five-year research project funded by the Innovative Health Initiative Joint Undertaking (IHI JU) under grant agreement No 101194710. The JU receives support from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme and COCIR, EFPIA, Europa Bío, MedTech Europe, Vaccines Europe and industry partners. Selected under the IHI call “User-centric technologies and optimized hospital workflows for a sustainable healthcare workforce”, the project aims to develop an integrated, automated platform that enables point-of-care CAR-T cell manufacturing—cutting production time, reducing costs, and expanding access to next-generation immunotherapies.

The Technical University of Denmark (DTU) contributes to EASYGEN by leading efforts in process and operations management, co-creation, and stakeholder engagement. Drawing on DTU’s interdisciplinary expertise in data science, social science, and health systems research, the project aims to ensure that the new CAR-T production workflows are not only technically robust but also aligned with real-world clinical needs. DTU’s role is to help integrate advanced technologies into hospital routines in ways that are efficient, inclusive, and sustainable.

Disclaimer: Funded by the European Union, the private members, and those contributing partners of the IHI JU. Views and opinions expressed are, however, those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the aforementioned parties. Neither of the aforementioned parties can be held responsible for them.

Contact

Jens O. Brunner

Jens O. Brunner Professor Department of Technology, Management and Economics Mobile: +45 29 99 06 90