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Funded Projects › HORIZON

METASTRA · COMPUTER-AIDED EFFECTIVE FRACTURE RISK STRATIFICATION OF PATIENTS WITH VERTEBRAL METASTASES FOR PERSONALISED TREATMENT THROUGH ROBUST COMPUTATIONAL MODELS VALIDATED IN CLINICAL SETTINGS

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 July 202330 June 2028EU funding €5,087,743Call HORIZON-HLTH-2022-TOOL-12-two-stage

Cancer patients (2.7M in Europe) with a positive prognosis are exposed to a high incidence of secondary tumours (≈1M). Bone metastases spread to the spine in 30-70% cases, reducing the load bearing capacity of the vertebrae and triggering fracture in 30% cases. Clinicians have only two options: either operate to stabilise the spine, or leave the patient exposed to a high fracture risk. The decision is highly subjective and can either lead to unnecessary surgery, or a fracture significantly affecting the quality of life and cancer treatment.The standard-of-care to classify patients with vertebral metastasis are scoring systems based on radiographic images, with little consideration of the local biomechanics. Current scoring systems are unable to establish an indication for surgery in around 60% of cases. Thus, there is an unmet need to accurately and timely quantify the risk of fracture to improve patient stratification and identify the best personalised treatment.This interdisciplinary project will develop Artificial Intelligence (AI)- and Physiology-based (VPH) biomechanical computational models to stratify patients with spine metastasis who are at high risk of fracture and to identify the best personalised surgical treatment. After rigorous model training with clinical (2000 retrospective cases) and biomechanical (120 ex vivo specimens) data, the new approach will be tested in a multicentric prospective observational study (200 patients). The models will be combined in a decision support system (DSS) enabling clinicians to successfully stratify metastatic patients. The models and the DSS will be designed so as to be suitable for regulatory requirements and future exploitation.METASTRA will propose new guidelines for the stratification and management of metastatic patients. METASTRA approach is expected to cut the uncertain diagnoses from the current 60% down to 20% of cases. This will reduce patient suffering, and allow cutting expenditure by 2.4B€/year.

Consortium · 16 organisations

coordinator

ALMA MATER STUDIORUM - UNIVERSITA DI BOLOGNA

IT · €1,474,386

associatedPartner

THE UNIVERSITY OF SHEFFIELD

UK

participant

UNIVERSIDAD DE ZARAGOZA

ES · €319,999

participant

VOISIN CONSULTING LIFE SCIENCES

FR · €469,893

associatedPartner

AO FOUNDATION

CH

participant

EURICE EUROPEAN RESEARCH AND PROJECT OFFICE GMBH

DE · €333,750

participant

ISTITUTO ORTOPEDICO RIZZOLI

IT · €481,750

participant

BUDAI EGESZSEGKOZPONT ZRT

HU · €426,000

participant

UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRUM UTRECHT

NL · €574,850

associatedPartner

EIDGENOESSISCHE TECHNISCHE HOCHSCHULE ZUERICH

CH

participant

CHARITE - UNIVERSITAETSMEDIZIN BERLIN

DE · €540,865

thirdParty

RESEARCH AND INNOVATION SERVICES DOO ZA USLUGE

HR

participant

INSILICOTRIALS TECHNOLOGIES S.P.A.

IT · €130,000

participant

PHILIPS GMBH

DE

associatedPartner

SZEGEDI TUDOMANYEGYETEM

HU

participant

FRONTENDART SZOFTVER KFT

HU · €336,250

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.