New AI Tool Helps Personalize Breast Cancer Therap
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University of Waterloo researchers have created a tool that leverages artificial intelligence (AI) to personalize breast cancer treatment. The development of machine learning and artificial intelligence technology in recent years has been a game changer, allowing professionals in various industries to streamline processes and gain results that are more effective without having to hire more workers.
This technology can be especially beneficial in the medical industry, as it allows physicians to analyze extremely large data sets and come up with better and more effective ways of treating patients.
Given that breast cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in the United State. and across the world, researchers were bound to employ AI technology in efforts to improve breast cancer therapies. Researchers from the University of Waterloo used this technology to develop a tool that can allow cancer specialists to determine whether breast cancer patients should receive chemotherapy treatment before undergoing surgery to remove as much of the tumor as possible.
While chemotherapy has proven to be effective at killing cancer cells, its side effects are often so severe that patients have to take additional medication to bear the treatment. With this new algorithm, physicians will be able to determine whether opting for chemotherapy first or going straight to surgery is the best option for the patient. The AI tool will spare some patients from the debilitating side effects of chemotherapy, while allowing the patients who could benefit from chemotherapy treatment to receive it.
The algorithm is part of Cancer-Net, an open-source, information-sharing initiative led by University of Waterloo professor of systems design engineering Dr. Alexander Wong. Wong stated it is currently difficult to decide the correct breast cancer treatment for a given patient, adding that it was important to avoid unwanted side effects from a treatment that may not benefit the patient in any real way.
He explained that an AI system capable of predicting whether a breast cancer patient will respond well to treatment provides physicians with a crucial tool that allows them to come up with personalized treatment plans for every patient. Wong, who also acts as the director of the Canada Research Chair in Artificial Intelligence and Medical Imaging and the Vision and Image Processing (VIP) Lab, noted that he was optimistic about the AI tool, as the machine learning technology it uses is capable of discovering patterns and determining whether a breast cancer patient will benefit from specific treatments.
He highlighted that such a tool would help to improve disease recovery and survival.
With so many enterprises such as CNS Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: CNSP) devoting research resources to different kinds of cancer, a time is coming when patients will stand a better chance of beating the different malignancies afflicting them.
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