Personalized Therapy

Personalized medication using digital drug manufacturing and Biomedical electronics for organ-on-chip

Hosted by TNO - including live Q&A
Date: Wednesday, 3 November 2020

About this webinar

Personalized medication using digital drug manufacturing

In this talk we will present TNO’s R&D activities in digital drug manufacturing. Patient-specific diagnosis and treatment becomes possible as a result of the ever-increasing amount of patient data available, leading to better clinical outcomes. Digital drug manufacturing utilizing 3D printing techniques enables personalized drug products with unique functionalities unattainable through traditional manufacturing methods. TNO is working to address the technical, medical and regulatory challenges on the road to practical application.

Biomedical electronics for organ-on-chip

Integrating electronics with organ-on-chip-related technologies can assist in the development of better medicines, such as those for neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases. TNO Holst Centre is actively engaging in the electronics, microfluidics and integration technologies needed for the realization of human models on chip. In this talk, we will introduce the background and initial concepts for the realization of Organ-on-Chip applications with integrated electronics.

Anton Aulbers

MSc, Senior Consultant – 3D Pharma Printing

Anton has a background in Industrial Design Engineering. He has 30 years of experience in co-creating innovative multi-disciplinary technical solutions for and with customers in a wide range of domains, such as 3D printing. As Senior Consultant 3D Pharma printing Anton is taking the lead in tracking developments globally, defining the TNO roadmap for digital drug manufacturing, building strategic partnerships and developing the technology towards implementation in the market.

Dr. Auke Kronemeijer

Program Manager – Thin Film Electronics

Auke Jisk Kronemeijer received his B.Sc. degree in Chemistry (2004), M.Sc. degree in Nanoscience (2006) and Ph. D. degree in Applied Physics on the subject of Molecular and Organic Electronics (2011), all from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. Afterwards he joined the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, as a Research Associate in Organic Electronics. After shaping the research agenda on the subject of ‘Sensoring’ at KWR Watercycle Research Institute back in the Netherlands, he moved to TNO / Holst Centre as a Senior Researcher in 2015, where currently he is Program Manager Thin Film Electronics and manages Holst Centre’s R&D Pilot Manufacturing Line.

Overview:

Personalized medication using digital drug manufacturing

presenter: Anton Aulbers, duration: 20 + 10 min Q&A

Biomedical electronics for organ-on-chip

presenter: Dr. Auke Kronemeijer, 20 + 10 min Q&A

Date: Tuesday, 3 November 2020

Time: 9 am San Francisco - 12 noon New York - 6 pm Amsterdam

Duration: 60 minutes including live Q&A