
"In an interview earlier this year, ArteraAI's chief medical officer, Timothy Showalter, explained what this system does. "[W]e actually run the test on an H&E-stained biopsy slide, digitize that slide, and run an algorithm that provides personalized information for that patient's likelihood of having a metastasis at 10 years, as well as predictive information for whether that patient is likely to benefit from hormone therapy," he told UroToday."
"As Nicola Davis reports at The Guardian, a three-year program funded by the nonprofit group Prostate Cancer U.K. is now underway at three hospitals across the country. The Guardian reports that the program will use the ArteraAI Prostate Biopsy Assay system to analyze biopsies from thousands of patients and assess their risk levels and help determine whether a particular drug should be used as part of their treatment."
"To what precise ends that tech is being used can vary dramatically from hospital to hospital; several medical spaces in Washington State are using AI for everything from transcribing doctor-patient conversations and answering some rudimentary questions from people there for treatment.But those aren't the only ways that AI is being utilized in a healthcare context; a continent away, a pilot program is about to put AI to the test to see if it can help doctors better detect prostate cancer in their patients."
AI is being integrated into medical workflows, including tasks such as transcribing doctor-patient conversations and answering routine patient questions. A three-year program funded by Prostate Cancer U.K. is underway at three hospitals to use the ArteraAI Prostate Biopsy Assay to analyze thousands of biopsy slides, assess individual risk levels, and inform treatment decisions. The ArteraAI workflow digitizes H&E-stained biopsy slides and runs an algorithm that estimates a patient's 10-year metastasis likelihood and predicts potential benefit from hormone therapy. Medical experts aim to use these predictions to match treatment intensity to each patient's needs.
Read at InsideHook
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