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Multiply Labs Cuts Cell Therapy Costs By 74 Percent With Universal Robots


(MENAFN- Robotics & Automation News) Multiply Labs reduces costs by 74 percent using Universal Robots

August 26, 2025 by Mai Tao

Multiply Labs , a robotics company, has developed a new robotic biomanufacturing cluster that achieves“a 74 percent cost reduction” for life-saving cell therapies.

This breakthrough, published in peer-reviewed studies with UCSF, leverages collaborative robot arms from Universal Robots (UR), promising to transform how these complex treatments are produced.

As UR's first official partner in the cell and gene therapy sector, Multiply Labs' robotically automated manufacturing processes will significantly expand patient access to therapies currently priced between $300,000 and $2 million per dose.

Fred Parietti, CEO of Multiply Labs, says:“Historically, cell and gene therapy manufacturing has been manual, almost artisanal.

“Expert scientists perform hundreds of tasks by hand, from pipetting to shaking cells.”

Unlike mass-produced drugs, personalized cell therapies, often used to treat blood cancers like lymphoma and leukemia, require a customized dose from each patient's own cells, making large-batch production impossible.

A single microbial contamination renders the entire product unusable, leading to costly manufacturing failures.

A quantum leap in cell therapy manufacturing

Multiply Labs' modular“robotic biomanufacturing cluster” features multiple UR robot arms working in parallel, stacked floor-to-ceiling with collision avoidance, handling the entire cell therapy manufacturing process.

This system faithfully replicates manual processes with enhanced efficiency, repeatability, and sanitary conditions.

Dr Jonathan Esensten, director of the Advanced Biotherapy Center at Sheba Medical Center (formerly UCSF faculty), collaborated with Multiply Labs to develop the robotic solution.

He says:“When we compared a traditional manual manufacturing process for these cell therapies to a robotic process doing the exact same process, we found a cost reduction of approximately 74 percent.”

Dr Esensten adds:“Growing T cells is something that we have been doing for a long time, but to have the robotic system do it without any human hands touching the cells throughout the process, that is a quantum leap in terms of being able to manufacture these medicines at a lower cost, and in a smaller space.”

Up to 100x more patient doses per square foot of cleanroom

Beyond cost savings, the robotic system drastically improves space utilization, says Parietti, citing up to 100x more patient doses per square foot of cleanroom compared to a typical manual process. Quality and sterility are also significantly enhanced.

Parietti says:“Robots don't breathe, and they don't touch stuff they're not supposed to touch.”

The UCSF study confirms this.

“While human handling led to contamination in one case, we did not see any contamination in the robotic process,” adds Dr Esensten.

Imitation learning for process fidelity

A core innovation is Multiply Labs' 'imitation learning' technology, where robots learn from expert human demonstrations rather than dictating new processes.

Parietti says:“We ask the pharmaceutical companies that we work with to videotape their scientists performing the tasks.

“We then feed this data to the robots, and the robots learn to effectively replicate what scientists were doing in the lab, just more efficiently, more repeatably, 24/7, and in parallel.”

Parietti emphasizes how this approach allows the UR robots to“self-learn hundreds of new tasks” with exponentially lower engineering costs.

According to Dr Esensten, this process fidelity is also crucial for regulatory compliance, potentially saving decades and billions of dollars in re-approval costs by replicating existing, already approved processes.

Esensten says:“Instead of starting from square zero in terms of drug approval, companies can now document that this is the exact same manufacturing process. It just happens to be done by a robot.”

Universal Robots chosen after suites of tests

Multiply Labs chose Universal Robots for their robotics cluster after closely evaluating several different collaborative robots, explains head of robotics at Multiply Labs, Nadia Kreciglowa.

Kreciglowa says:“UR was chosen due to their crucial six-axis capabilities, unrivaled force mode for delicate handling, seamless software integration, robust community support, and cleanroom compatibility.”

According to Jean-Pierre Hathout, president, Universal Robots, the new partnership illustrates the“profound impact” of collaborative automation in the healthcare space.

Hathout says:“By empowering Multiply Labs to replicate intricate manual processes with high precision and scale, our cobots are redefining efficiency in pharmaceutical manufacturing.

“More importantly, it's driving significant cost reductions while broadening access to life-saving treatments. At its core, this partnership is a testament to how robotics can elevate human capability and serve critical needs in medicine.”

The Multiply Labs robotic cluster is already deployed in global pharmaceutical companies with results now also documented in collaboration with scientists at Stanford University.

Parietti says:“This will really change the way we think about the manufacturing of these bespoke, custom cell and gene therapies for patients.

“We will ultimately improve patient access globally by lowering manufacturing costs, enabling distributed production worldwide of these life-saving therapies.”

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