May 13, 2026

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

Members of the TEN4CARE team were among the key contributors at the TERMIS-EU 2026 Annual Conference, held at the Palau de Congressos de Palma in Palma de Mallorca (Spain) from 21 to 24 April 2026. Organised under the theme “Accelerating multidisciplinary innovation to close the gap in clinical translation”, the event brought together leading researchers, clinicians and industry experts in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine from across Europe and beyond.

Our participation spanned chairing, invited talks and scientific presentations, reflecting the breadth of the project’s contributions to the field.

The project’s principal investigator, Giuseppina Sandri (University of Pavia), chaired the parallel symposium ‘Biomaterials: Design, Development and Regulatory Issues’, an event of particular relevance to TEN4CARE, whose work focuses precisely on the development of innovative biomaterials for clinical application.

As part of this symposium, Sandra Ferretti delivered a presentation as a guest speaker: “Regulatory Framework for Innovative Smart Biomaterials”, addressing the regulatory environment for smart biomaterials, a key strategic dimension within the project.

In addition, the TEN4CARE team presented a paper reflecting the project’s technical advances entitled “Thermosensitive smart composite scaffolds for cartilage repair”.

The TEN4CARE project’s presence at TERMIS-EU 2026 reflects our commitment to bridging cutting-edge biomaterial science with the practical regulatory and clinical translation challenges that define the path to real-world impact. From injectable hydrogels and smart scaffolds to regulatory frameworks, the contributions presented in Palma demonstrate the breadth and depth of the work being carried out across our consortium.

We look forward to continuing to share our findings with the tissue engineering and regenerative medicine community at upcoming events. Stay tuned for more updates.

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

TEN4CARE at TERMIS-EU 2026: Shaping the conversation on smart biomaterials and regulatory innovation

Members of the TEN4CARE team were among the key contributors at the TERMIS-EU 2026 Annual Conference, held at the Palau de Congressos de Palma in Palma de Mallorca (Spain) from 21 to 24 April 2026. Organised under the theme “Accelerating multidisciplinary innovation to close the gap in clinical translation”, the event brought together leading researchers, clinicians and industry experts in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine from across Europe and beyond.

Our participation spanned chairing, invited talks and scientific presentations, reflecting the breadth of the project’s contributions to the field.

The project’s principal investigator, Giuseppina Sandri (University of Pavia), chaired the parallel symposium ‘Biomaterials: Design, Development and Regulatory Issues’, an event of particular relevance to TEN4CARE, whose work focuses precisely on the development of innovative biomaterials for clinical application.

As part of this symposium, Sandra Ferretti delivered a presentation as a guest speaker: “Regulatory Framework for Innovative Smart Biomaterials”, addressing the regulatory environment for smart biomaterials, a key strategic dimension within the project.

In addition, the TEN4CARE team presented a paper reflecting the project’s technical advances entitled “Thermosensitive smart composite scaffolds for cartilage repair”.

The TEN4CARE project’s presence at TERMIS-EU 2026 reflects our commitment to bridging cutting-edge biomaterial science with the practical regulatory and clinical translation challenges that define the path to real-world impact. From injectable hydrogels and smart scaffolds to regulatory frameworks, the contributions presented in Palma demonstrate the breadth and depth of the work being carried out across our consortium.

We look forward to continuing to share our findings with the tissue engineering and regenerative medicine community at upcoming events. Stay tuned for more updates.