Students use AI technology to find new brain tumor therapy targets -- with a goal of fighting disease faster
Thomas Fuchs, the Dean of Artificial Intelligence and Human Health at Mount Sinai in NYC, said AI will be needed to retain the standard of care in the U.S. Glioblastoma is one of the deadliest types of brain cancer, with the average patient living only eight months after diagnosis, according to the National Brain Tumor Society, a nonprofit. Two ambitious high school students -- Andrea Olsen, 18, from Oslo, Norway, and Zachary Harpaz, 16, from Fort Lauderdale, Florida -- are looking to change that. The teens partnered with Insilico Medicine, a Hong Kong-based medical technology company, to identify three new target genes linked to glioblastoma and aging. They used Insilico's artificial intelligence platform, PandaOmics, to make the discovery -- and now, they plan to continue researching ways to fight the disease with new drugs. Their findings about target genes were published on April 26 in Aging, a peer-reviewed biomedical academic journal.
May-1-2023, 06:00:24 GMT
- Country:
- Asia > China
- Hong Kong (0.25)
- Europe > Norway
- Eastern Norway > Oslo (0.25)
- North America > United States
- Florida > Broward County > Fort Lauderdale (0.26)
- Asia > China
- Industry:
- Technology: