A digital platform that streamlines and personalises care delivery for asthma patients.

The challenge

Asthma affects over 262 million people globally, with a high prevalence across Europe – impacting 8% of adults and 9% of children. [1],[2] Despite being a manageable condition, asthma remains a significant health and economic burden, particularly in severe cases that lead to frequent emergency visits and hospital admissions.

In Europe, around 10% of adult asthma patients suffer from severe or difficult-to-control forms of the disease. [3] These individuals often experience recurrent exacerbations, reduced quality of life, and increased risk of unplanned hospitalisation. Caregivers are also heavily impacted, often navigating fragmented healthcare systems and filling in coordination gaps themselves. [4],[5]

Evidence shows that timely identification and adherence to clinical guidelines can significantly reduce emergency care needs. [6] Yet care for asthma remains highly fragmented, with poor integration across home, primary, and specialist care settings. This fragmentation leads to delayed responses to respiratory crises, especially in slow-onset episodes that evolve over days and are often mismanaged.

Compounding the issue, Europe’s healthcare systems face mounting workforce shortages, with over 40% of doctors nearing retirement age in several countries. [7] As healthcare teams become increasingly overstretched, the need for smart, integrated tools that enhance care continuity and clinical efficiency has never been more urgent.

Technology offers part of the solution. Platforms that coordinate care, support clinical decision-making, and automate routine tasks can reduce the burden on clinicians, close care gaps, and ultimately prevent avoidable hospital visits, especially for patients with severe asthma.

The solution

UpHill® Route is an evidence-based digital platform designed to orchestrate, coordinate, and streamline patient care journeys across health systems. Acting as a care orchestration solution, it enables healthcare professionals to deliver consistent, guideline-compliant care while reducing unnecessary emergency visits and hospital admissions.

Certified as a Class IIa medical device, UpHill Route supports clinical teams by transforming validated care pathways into actionable, digital workflows. These care journeys are continuously adapted based on real-time data from electronic health records (EHRs), patient self-reports, and remote monitoring tools. As a result, the platform creates dynamic, personalised care plans that evolve with each patient’s condition.

The platform enables:

  • Care coordination: Supports multidisciplinary teams by assigning, tracking, and automating tasks aligned with clinical best practices.
  • Decision support: Provides HCPs with locally validated, step-by-step guidance tailored to specific medical conditions.
  • Continuity of care: Ensures patients remain under active follow-up, even across different care settings or stages of treatment.

Proven use cases of UpHill Route include:

  • Pre-operative optimisation: Streamlining care before surgical procedures.
  • Chronic disease management: Enhancing integration in complex, multi-unit care settings.
  • Oncology care pathways: Supporting timely, coordinated interventions in cancer treatment.

Through its flexible, modular design, UpHill Route bridges gaps in care, automates routine clinical activities, and enhances communication across care teams, ultimately improving outcomes for patients and operational efficiency for healthcare providers.

Expected impact

The Route2Spain project is designed to address a critical challenge in healthcare: the management of patients with severe asthma. The desired outcome of the project is to improve the control and quality of life of these patients by enabling earlier identification of those at high risk. At the same time, it aims to strengthen healthcare systems and contribute to the development of a more sustainable health economy in Europe.

At the heart of this project lies a digitally orchestrated clinical pathway that automates essential steps in asthma care, such as data collection, patient communications, and clinical documentation, while also supporting healthcare professionals with timely insights and decision-making tools. This pathway is composed of five main phases:

  1. Pre-consultation: Where symptoms, treatment adherence, biomarkers, and past emergency visits are reviewed in advance to better prepare the clinician.
  2. Stratification: Offering real-time visibility into each patient’s phenotype, respiratory function, and risk history, to ensure early and targeted interventions.
  3. Automatic alerts: Triggered by signs of clinical deterioration (e.g., increased use of rescue medication or changes in respiratory flow), which allow for rapid action before an exacerbation occurs.
  4. Visibility of emergency department episodes: Ensuring that the care team has access to information on acute treatments and follow-up needs after an urgent event.
  5. Post-crisis follow-up: Guiding healthcare professionals in identifying and prioritizing patients who require more intensive monitoring or tailored support after a severe episode.

These structured, automated interventions generate a series of expected outcomes:

  • Improved preparation for clinical consultations,
  • Accurate stratification of patients,
  • Timely alerts that prevent deterioration,
  • Multilevel visibility of care progression, and
  • Better-informed, more engaged patients.

Together, these improvements result in fewer hospitalisations, shorter time to intervention, and more efficient use of clinical resources.

By reducing variability in care, enabling earlier interventions, and automating routine tasks, Route2Spain strengthens healthcare systems with scalable digital infrastructure. In the long term, it supports a sustainable health economy by reducing unnecessary hospital costs, avoiding duplication of services, and improving chronic disease outcomes through proactive management.

External Partners
  • UpHill S.A. (Consortium Leader)
  • Hospital Universitario Puerta de Hierro Majadahonda
  • Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge
  • Hospital Universitari Joan XXIII de Tarragona
References

[1] World Health Organization (WHO) (2024) Asthma. Available at: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/asthma (Accessed: 5 November 2024).

[2] Farre, R. and Navajas, D. (2015) ‘Prone position in acute respiratory distress syndrome: the time has come’, European Respiratory Review, 24(137), pp. 474–476.

[3] British Thoracic Society (2000) ‘BTS guidelines for the management of community-acquired pneumonia in adults’, Thorax, 55(7), pp. 566–574.

[4] Sadatsafavi, M., Rousseau, R., Chen, W., et al. (2014) ‘The preventable burden of productivity loss due to suboptimal asthma control: a population-based study’, Chest, 145(4), pp. 787–793. doi: 10.1378/chest.13-1619.

[5] European Respiratory Society (ERS) (2020) ‘Asthma management: a new era’, Breathe, 16(3), pp. 1–5. Available at: https://publications.ersnet.org/content/breathe/16/3/200161 (Accessed: 5 November 2024).

[6] Sociedad Española de Médicos Generales y de Familia (SEMG) (2023) Guía Española para el Manejo del Asma (GEMA 5.3). Available at: https://www.semg.es/images/2023/documentos/GEMA_53.pdf (Accessed: 5 November 2024).

[7] ephconference.eu. ‘WHO/Europe Report: Health and care workforce in Europe: Time to act. Available at https://ephconference.eu/repository/conference/2022/Press%202022/Full%20press%20release%20WHO%20Report.pdf. (Accessed: 22 July 2025).

Antonio Marti Polo
| Lead Account Executive |
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Mariana Muñoz Esquerre
| Coordinadora de la Unidad Funcional de Asma |
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Virginia Gregorio Diaz
| Digital Business Manager | GSK
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