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    Home / News / Technology News / OpenAI's GPT-4o-powered AI tool to enhance cancer screening and treatment
    In brief
    Simplifying... Inbrief
    • OpenAI's GPT-4o-powered AI tool, developed by Color Health, is set to revolutionize cancer screening and treatment.
    • By processing patient data, it creates personalized screening strategies and assists doctors in pre-treatment preparations, potentially reducing the time to treatment.
    • However, while the tool has shown promise in trials, it's not without limitations, including the risk of generating false information and bias.
    Was a long read? Making it simpler...
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    OpenAI's GPT-4o-powered AI tool to enhance cancer screening and treatment
    The AI copilot operates by processing patient data, including personal risk factors and family history

    OpenAI's GPT-4o-powered AI tool to enhance cancer screening and treatment

    By Mudit Dube
    Jun 18, 2024
    09:36 am
    What's the story

    OpenAI, a renowned AI company based in San Francisco, is broadening its healthcare horizons through a strategic partnership with health startup Color Health. The collaboration aims to leverage artificial intelligence in cancer screening as well as treatment procedures. Color Health has engineered an AI assistant, or "copilot," that utilizes OpenAI's GPT-4o model to support doctors in formulating cancer screening and pretreatment strategies for patients.

    Functionality

    AI copilot's role in personalized cancer screening plans

    The AI copilot developed by Color Health operates by processing patient data, including personal risk factors and family history. It then uses this data in conjunction with clinical guidelines to devise a personalized cancer screening strategy. This informs doctors about any diagnostic tests the patient may be missing. Othman Laraki, CEO of Color Health, stated that "Primary care doctors don't tend to either have the time, or sometimes even the expertise, to risk-adjust people's screening guidelines."

    Pretreatment assistance

    AI copilot assists in cancer pretreatment work-up

    Beyond screening strategies, the AI copilot also aids doctors in assembling a cancer pretreatment "work-up" post-diagnosis. This work-up comprises specialized imaging and lab tests, and securing prior authorization from health insurance to order these tests. According to Laraki, this procedure can take weeks or even months before a patient consults an oncologist. Studies indicate that a delay of a month can increase mortality by 6% to 13%.

    Industry insights

    AI in cancer treatment receives support, faces limitations

    Karen Knudsen, CEO of the American Cancer Society, endorses the use of AI in cancer treatment. She believes it can alleviate some administrative work that leads to burnout. However, Laraki stressed that the pretreatment work-up process is intricate and not intended for full takeover by AI. Despite its potential benefits, AI in healthcare has its limitations, including the tendency for AI models to generate false information and contain bias.

    Copilot trial

    Clinicians analyze patient records in five minutes

    In a trial of the copilot, clinicians were able to analyze patient records in an average of five minutes. Alan Ashworth, president of the University of California San Francisco's Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, said they are testing Color's copilot for diagnostic work-ups as if it were a new drug. Ashworth stated that "Reducing the time to treatment by weeks would be considered a win."

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