HONG KONG – With an aging population and a shortage of doctors, Japan is now working to develop artificial intelligence (AI)-based medicine faster than any other country in Asia.
PERTH, Australia – It's likely that Australia will not draft separate guidance or regulations for software applications that use artificial intelligence or machine learning (AI/ML) for drug development or medical devices.
HONG KONG – South Korea is actively working to expand its artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities in health care, but outdated regulations and concerns over privacy and profit sharing are proving to be significant stumbling blocks.
The convergence of artificial intelligence (AI) and the health care sector was inevitable. The advent of machine-learning and deep-learning technologies capable of analyzing and synthesizing massive amounts of data with algorithms designed to mimic human-level decision-making seems a natural fit for an industry in dire need of greater efficiency.
As a cautious swimmer slips slowly into the cool waters of a giant swimming pool so do biopharma executives: They tread into the murky abyss known as artificial intelligence (AI).
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a technology that takes over when the human brain has reached its limit. For medical technology companies, it could help in the creation of more precise tools and devices that support diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical decisions. Instead of shooting an arrow into the sky, the bullseye target is clear, backed up by volumes of data and a machine learning algorithm designed to pinpoint the biomarker, the abnormality and the probability of success.
In late June, when Pfizer Inc. unveiled the first phase Ib data, mixed safety signal and all, for its Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene therapy, PF-06939926, investors in Sarepta Therapeutics Inc. as well as Solid Biosciences Inc. watched with particular interest. The latter firm seems none the worse for wear, though, raising $60 million in a private placement.
Nanophotonics pioneer Naomi Halas is one of the most recognized researchers in the field of nanotechnology, best known for her invention of nanoshells, a new type of nanoparticle with tunable optical properties especially suited for biotechnology applications. Now her invention is bearing fruit via a company she and her nanoshell collaborator Jennifer West founded. Nanospectra Biosciences, of Houston, has commenced a pilot human trial of its AuroLase Therapy in refractory and/or recurrent head and neck cancers.