Seeing into the future: Personalized cancer screening with artificial intelligence
While mammograms are currently the gold standard in breast cancer screening, swirls of controversy exist regarding when and how often they should be administered. On the one hand, advocates argue for the ability to save lives: Women aged 60-69 who receive mammograms, for example, have a 33 percent lower risk of dying compared to those who don't get mammograms. Meanwhile, others argue about costly and potentially traumatic false positives: A meta-analysis of three randomized trials found a 19 percent over-diagnosis rate from mammography. Even with some saved lives, and some overtreatment and overscreening, current guidelines are still a catch-all: Women aged 45 to 54 should get mammograms every year. While personalized screening has long been thought of as the answer, tools that can leverage the troves of data to do this lag behind.
Jan-24-2022, 07:09:45 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > Sweden
- North America > United States
- Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.40)
- Genre:
- Research Report (1.00)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Oncology > Breast Cancer (0.57)
- Technology: