AI Can Predict If Chemotherapy Would Benefit Breast Cancer Patients: Study
- byDoctor News Daily Team
- 03 July, 2025
- 0 Comments
- 0 Mins
 
                            
                                    Canada: A recent study has found that artificial intelligence (AI) technology can predict if breast cancer patients would benefit from chemotherapy before surgery. Engineers at the University of Waterloo developed AI technology.
The new AI algorithm, part of the open-source Cancer-Net initiative led by Dr. Alexander Wong, could help unsuitable candidates avoid the serious side effects of chemotherapy and pave the way for better surgical outcomes for suitable patients.
"Determining the right treatment for a given breast cancer patient is very difficult right now, and it is crucial to avoid unnecessary side effects from using treatments that are unlikely to have real benefit for that patient," said Wong, a professor of systems design engineering.
"An AI system that can help predict if a patient is likely to respond well to a given treatment gives doctors the tool needed to prescribe the best-personalized treatment for a patient to improve recovery and survival."
In a project led by Amy Tai, a graduate student with the Vision and Image Processing (VIP) Lab, the AI software was trained with images of breast cancer made with a new magnetic image resonance modality, invented by Wong and his team, called synthetic correlated diffusion imaging (CDI).
With knowledge gleaned from CDI images of old breast cancer cases and information on their outcomes, the AI can predict if pre-operative chemotherapy treatment would benefit new patients based on their CDI images.
Known as neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the pre-surgical treatment can shrink tumours to make surgery possible or easier and reduce the need for major surgery such as mastectomies.
"I'm quite optimistic about this technology as deep-learning AI has the potential to see and discover patterns that relate to whether a patient will benefit from a given treatment," said Wong, a director of the VIP Lab and the Canada Research Chair in Artificial Intelligence and Medical Imaging.
A paper on the project, Cancer-Net BCa: Breast Cancer Pathologic Complete Response Prediction using Volumetric Deep Radiomic Features from Synthetic Correlated Diffusion Imaging, was recently presented at Med-NeurIPS as part of NeurIPS 2022, a major international conference on AI.
The new AI algorithm and the complete dataset of CDI images of breast cancer have been made publicly available through the Cancer-Net initiative so other researchers can help advance the field.
Reference:
AI can predict the effectiveness of breast cancer chemotherapy,University of Waterloo. Meeting Neural Information Processing Systems 2022
                                
    Disclaimer: This website is designed for healthcare professionals and serves solely for informational purposes.
    The content provided should not be interpreted as medical advice, diagnosis, treatment recommendations, prescriptions, or endorsements of specific medical practices. It is not a replacement for professional medical consultation or the expertise of a licensed healthcare provider.
    Given the ever-evolving nature of medical science, we strive to keep our information accurate and up to date. However, we do not guarantee the completeness or accuracy of the content.
    If you come across any inconsistencies, please reach out to us at 
    admin@doctornewsdaily.com.
    We do not support or endorse medical opinions, treatments, or recommendations that contradict the advice of qualified healthcare professionals.
    By using this website, you agree to our 
    Terms of Use, 
    Privacy Policy, and 
    Advertisement Policy.
    For further details, please review our 
    Full Disclaimer.
Tags:
Recent News
Merck Keytruda wins European Commission nod for lo...
- 30 October, 2025
UP NEET 2025 round 3 allotment results postponed
- 30 October, 2025
Achin Gupta to succeed Umang Vohra as Cipla MD, GC...
- 30 October, 2025
Mumbai shocker: KEM Hospital doctor stabbed by col...
- 30 October, 2025
Daily Newsletter
Get all the top stories from Blogs to keep track.
 
                     
                    
0 Comments
Post a comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!