Bone fractures, particularly those related to bone fragility, represent a growing challenge for European societies. Increasing life expectancy and age-related conditions such as osteoporosis are driving a rise in fragility fractures, which often result in pain, long recovery periods, loss of independence and reduced quality of life. These injuries also place a substantial burden on healthcare systems and public finances. Despite advances in imaging and treatment, fractures are frequently detected too late, and current diagnostic tools remain limited in accurately predicting fracture risk.
The GAP project (image-Guided computational and experimental analysis of fractured Patients) was designed to address this urgent medical and societal need. Its central aim is to improve how fractures are understood, detected and treated by focusing on bone damage at very small scales, well before complete fractures occur. Bone strength depends not only on shape and density but also on its complex internal micro-architecture, which is largely invisible to standard clinical diagnostics.
To overcome this limitation, GAP integrates advanced imaging, experimental testing, computational modelling and artificial intelligence within a single research and training framework. Bone damage is studied across multiple length scales using high-resolution imaging combined with mechanical testing under realistic conditions, and the resulting observations are translated into numerical and data-driven tools to identify early damage and fracture risk patterns.
In parallel, GAP trains a new generation of highly skilled researchers through an international doctoral network that bridges engineering, biomedical sciences, computer science and clinical research. This interdisciplinary approach prepares young scientists to translate research outcomes into practical solutions.
Beyond diagnosis, the project also explores bone-inspired, mini-invasive and patient-specific repair strategies, with the potential to improve fracture healing and long-term outcomes. Embedded in the broader European context of healthy ageing and sustainable healthcare, GAP contributes to strengthening Europe’s capacity to prevent fractures, enhance patient care and reduce the social and economic impact of bone fragility.
Further information about the project is available on:
i) the project website:
https://www.gapmscaproject.com/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)ii) LinkedIn profile:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/gap-msca-project-72a536316/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)iii) Instagram profile:
https://www.instagram.com/gap_msca_project/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)