Abstract
Bioinformatics tools are increasingly important for diagnostics in clinical care and precision medicine, but despite a very active bioinformatics research community, implementation and adaptation is slow. Drawing on multidisciplinary expertise, we have identified key systemic barriers on the journey from research to implementation, using the Danish healthcare ecosystem as the example. We find the main obstacles to be regulatory uncertainty, fragmented data access, and limited infrastructure for implementation. Cultural resistance to commercialization and workforce gaps further impedes progress. We believe that these challenges reflect broader international trends and could be generally applicable. Consensus recommendations include centralized data and regulatory resources, cross-sector collaboration models, and pilot initiatives to support scalable implementation. These findings offer a roadmap for translating bioinformatics innovation into clinical practice.