Precision Medicine News

Precision Pathology Artificial Intelligence May Improve Cancer Treatment

A new artificial intelligence tool designed to interpret gene activity within medical images may provide insights into the pathology of diseases like cancer.

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Source: Getty Images

By Shania Kennedy

- Researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania have developed an artificial intelligence (AI)-based medical imaging technique capable of analyzing the gene activity found within tissue microenvironments, which may have significant impacts on precision medicine and pathology, according to a study published last week in Nature Biotechnology.

The tool, known as Inferring Super-Resolution Tissue Architecture (iStar), is designed to provide both detailed views of individual cells and a broader understanding of how a patient’s genes operate. The research team believes that the tool could help clinicians better diagnose and treat cancers that could go undetected using traditional methods.

Using the tool, clinicians can observe cancer cells that may have been virtually invisible when relying on current imaging and pathology methodologies. iStar is capable of automatically detecting tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), tissues that drive immune responses in a host of chronic diseases, including cancer.