Healthy Investment in Central and Eastern Europe (HICEE) framework
The challenge
Across Europe, early-stage investment in health and life sciences remains highly uneven. In Central and Eastern Europe and other modest and moderate innovation regions, strong research and entrepreneurial potential often fails to translate into investable ventures. Fragmented ecosystems, limited venture-building capacity within technology transfer offices and start-up support organisations, low investor familiarity with HealthTech and deep-tech markets, and weak cross-border connectivity continue to constrain the development of robust early-stage pipelines.
These structural gaps not only slow the commercialisation of research, but also limit the participation of underrepresented regions in Europe’s innovation economy, weakening competitiveness, cohesion, and the scale-up potential of health innovation.
The ‘Healthy Investment in Central and Eastern Europe’ (HICEE) project, which ran from November 2023 to November 2025, was designed to strengthen early-stage HealthTech investment ecosystems in less connected regions by reinforcing the full investment pipeline, from asset development and venture building to investor readiness and cross-border dealflow. The project worked with multiple stakeholder groups in a coordinated way, including technology transfer offices, start-up support organisations, investors, and early-stage companies.
Rather than offering generic support, HICEE based its interventions on identified stakeholder needs. Ecosystem mapping and needs analysis informed the design of targeted capacity-building programmes for technology transfer offices and start-up support organisations, investor education and exchange formats, and tailored investment-readiness and de-risking support for early-stage ventures. This integrated approach ensured that asset development, venture building, and investment preparation were aligned across the innovation and investment chain.
The project also adapted and transferred proven tools and methodologies across different stages of the pipeline, from early-stage asset evaluation and venture creation to investment readiness and international de-risking. By applying and testing these approaches in modest and moderate regions, HICEE demonstrated how established methods can be reused and combined to strengthen health and deep-tech innovation pipelines and improve their connection to local and international investors.
HICEE brought together a consortium of 9 beneficiaries from 11 European countries, representing technology transfer offices, start-up support organisations, investor networks, universities and innovation intermediaries across modest, moderate and dynamic innovation ecosystems. Through this multi-stakeholder collaboration, the project strengthened cross-border connectivity, improved venture and investor readiness, and contributed to the development of more balanced and resilient early-stage investment ecosystems in Central and Eastern Europe and across Europe.