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Microsoft develops cervical cancer diagnosing tool

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Microsoft develops cervical cancer diagnosing tool

Microsoft and SRL Diagnostics have developed an AI tool that helps detect cervical cancer, freeing doctors in India and other countries where the sheer volume of patients could prove overwhelming.

The team trained an AI to spot signs of the cancer by feeding it “thousands” of annotated cervical smear images to help it spot abnormalities (including pre-cancerous examples) that warrant a closer look.

Doctors would now only have to look at those slides that justify real concern.

A framework for using the AI is now ready for an “internal preview” at SRL. It’s not in use in the field just yet, then, but that’s considerably better than other AI cancer screening methods that typically don’t exist as more than experiments.

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TechCrunch noted that roughly 67,000 women die of cervical cancer in India each year, or more than a quarter of the deaths worldwide.

At the same time, there are just a handful of doctors that can process pap smears and help women take action.

SRL alone receives over 100,000 samples per year, and 98 percent of those are normal.

Reports say the AI would let doctors focus on just the two percent of samples that are problematic and help women start treatment sooner.

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