Beyond the state of the art, TRIP did not only disseminate knowledge; it converted training into tangible, sustainable assets that remain operational after project end. The project created an integrated clinic–data–lab loop in pancreatology, combining structured education and mobility with new clinical services, GDPR-compliant registries, a digital second-opinion pathway and a multicentre organoid protocol.
Main results and named outputs beyond the state of the art
• High-Risk Pancreatic Clinic (UMFCD): first dedicated unit in Romania with two components (hereditary high-risk surveillance and pancreatic cyst surveillance), operational since April 2025, and embedded into routine follow-up workflows.
• Two GDPR-compliant registries supporting high-risk surveillance and research readiness (hereditary risk registry + cyst surveillance registry) hosted under the High-Risk Clinic infrastructure (
https://highriskclinic.umfcd.ro(si apre in una nuova finestra)).
• National pilot pancreatic cancer screening protocol and database architecture aligned with international standards (CAPS and Dutch models), integrating MRI/EUS follow-up and biomarker capture.
• TRIP Second Opinion Platform (https://tripproject.umfcd.ro): a secure digital interface for remote expert case evaluation, including structured intake, file upload, case assignment and expert review modules; demonstrated internally and planned for integration with UMFCD’s digital health hub.
• Multicentre PDAC organoid protocol (D7.1) and implementation pathway from EUS-FNB sampling to culture establishment and pharmacotyping, enabling future precision-oncology trials and translational studies.
• Clinical innovation in advanced EUS: implementation of contrast-enhanced harmonic EUS with inflow-time mapping (ITM), AI-powered contrast harmonic imaging EUS (CHI-EUS), and EUS-guided 2D shear-wave elastography (2D-SWE), supported by training and partner harmonisation.