If you are a health-tech app developer dealing with fragmented medical content — this project developed a modular information portal that integrates with existing electronic health infrastructures. This allows you to plug in verified, evidence-based cancer data into your own user interface.
AI-Powered European Digital Portal for Personalized Cancer Patient Information and Care
Imagine a single, trusted digital library where anyone fighting cancer can find clear answers about their treatment and recovery. Instead of searching through confusing medical sites, it acts like a smart guide that adapts to a person's specific needs. It's designed to make sure a patient in one country gets the same high-quality advice as someone in another.
What needed solving
Cancer patients face fragmented, confusing, and unequal access to reliable medical information across different European regions. This leads to lower health literacy and poor quality of life during treatment.
What was built
A modular cancer information portal and a Common Library of Contents supported by AI tooling for content review.
Who needs this
Who can put this to work
If you are a private oncology clinic dealing with patients who struggle to understand their treatment plans — this project developed a patient-centric portal to improve health literacy. This reduces the time doctors spend repeating basic information and improves patient adherence.
If you are a pharma company dealing with the need to provide better quality-of-life support for drug users — this project developed a Common Library of Contents for high-incidence and paediatric cancers. This provides a standardized way to deliver side-effect and rehabilitation information.
Quick answers
What is the cost or pricing for using the portal?
Based on available project data, no pricing or cost information is provided as this is an EU-funded initiative.
Can this be scaled to an industrial level?
Yes, the project is designing a governance system for scalable content creation and will deploy nodes in 10 Member States.
What are the IP and licensing terms for the content library?
Based on available project data, specific licensing terms are not mentioned, but it creates a Common Library of Contents available to all Member States.
How does the system integrate with existing hospital software?
The central and local nodes are built in a modular fashion specifically to allow integration with existing electronic health infrastructures.
What is the timeline for the rollout?
The project runs from 2025-05-01 to 2029-04-30.
Who built it
The consortium is highly diverse with 40 partners across 18 countries, indicating a strong push for cross-border standardization. While dominated by research (17) and other organizations (14), there is a significant industrial presence with 5 companies and 7 SMEs, suggesting the project is designed with commercial integration and practical usability in mind from the start.
Contact Charite - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Talk to the team behind this work.
Contact us to explore integration opportunities with the EU-CIP modular nodes.