PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology

New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology
2024-01-30
(Press-News.org) An interview with Eric J. Topol, MD, a world-renowned cardiologist, best-selling author of several books on personalized medicine, and the founder and director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute in La Jolla, California, has been published. in the new peer-reviewed journal, AI in Precision Oncology. Dr. Topol is an advocate for using digital technologies and artificial intelligence in health care. click here to read the interview now.

Douglas Flora, MD, Editor-in-Chief of AI in Precision Oncology, interviewed Dr. Topol during the opening keynote session of the journal’s inaugural virtual summit, “The State of AI in Precision Oncology.”

“Over the next couple of years, I’m hoping we’ll start to see cancer screening get upended,” said Dr. Topol. We won’t have it finalized, but at least some of the trials are ongoing to challenge the old way of doing cancer screening. We will get a diagnosis improved, whether it’s because the accuracy of scan interpretation in the next couple of years or whether it’s because each doctor through their health system practice has access to a GPT support that gives them a differential diagnosis of difficult diagnoses.”

About the Journal
AI in Precision Oncology is the only peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the advancement of artificial intelligence applications in clinical and precision oncology. Spearheaded by Editor-in-Chief Douglas Flora, MD and supported by a diverse and accomplished team of international experts, the Journal provides a high-profile forum for cutting-edge research and frontmatter highlighting important research and industry-related advances rapidly developing within the field. For complete information, visit the AI in Precision Oncology website.

About the Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. is a global media company dedicated to creating, curating, and delivering impactful peer-reviewed research and authoritative content services to advance the fields of biotechnology and the life sciences, specialized clinical medicine, and public health and policy. For complete information, please visit the Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. website.

 

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology 2 New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rotman School Professor named to Thinkers50 Radar Class

Rotman School Professor named to Thinkers50 Radar Class
2024-01-30
Rotman School Professor Named to Thinkers50 Radar Class Toronto – Maja Djikic, an associate professor of organizational behaviour and human resource management at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, has been named to the Thinkers50 Radar class for 2024. Announced every January, the Thinkers50 Radar identifies a cohort of 30 up-and-coming thinkers from around the world whose ideas have the potential to make an important impact on management thinking in the future. A personality psychologist specializing in adult development, Prof. Djikic is executive director of the Self-Development Lab at the Rotman School, which provides ...

Researchers find early symptoms of psychosis spectrum disorder in youth higher than expected

Researchers find early symptoms of psychosis spectrum disorder in youth higher than expected
2024-01-30
A new study co-led by Associate Professor Kristin Cleverley of the Lawrence Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing has found evidence that Psychosis Spectrum Symptoms (PSS) are often present in youth accessing mental health services. From a profile of the initial 417 youth aged 11-24 participating in the study, 50 per cent were shown to meet the threshold for Psychosis Spectrum Symptoms, a number Cleverley says was higher than expected, meaning there is a large number of children with these symptoms accessing mental health services. Cleverley, ...

Pitt receives new grant to improve opioid use disorder treatment

Pitt receives new grant to improve opioid use disorder treatment
2024-01-30
PITTSBURGH – The University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy’s Program Evaluation and Research Unit (PERU) has received a five-year, $7.8 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to improve quality of care for patients with opioid use disorder across Pennsylvania.   The project will establish the Helping to End Addiction Long-term (HEALing) Measures Center at Pitt, which will focus on developing and implementing measurement-based care into 20 community opioid treatment programs across Pennsylvania with the goal of enhancing treatment ...

Researchers craft new way to make high-temperature superconductors – with a twist

2024-01-30
An international team that includes Rutgers University–New Brunswick scientists has developed a new method to make and manipulate a widely studied class of high-temperature superconductors. This technique should pave the way for the creation of unusual forms of superconductivity in previously unattainable materials. When cooled to a critical temperature, superconductors can conduct electricity without resistance or energy loss. These materials have intrigued physicists for decades because they can achieve a state of ...

Study suggests secret for getting teens to listen to unsolicited advice

2024-01-30
A new study may hold a secret for getting your teenager to listen to appreciate  your unsolicited advice. The University of California, Riverside, study, which included “emerging adults” — those in their late teens and early 20s — found teens will appreciate parents’ unsolicited advice, but only if the parent is supportive of their teens’ autonomy. Parents support autonomy by providing clear guidelines for limitations and rules that will be enforced. They ...

Tech inefficiencies, piles of (electronic) paperwork, and increased patient volume contribute to burnout of primary care physicians, study finds

2024-01-30
Burnout is an occupational phenomenon that results from chronic workplace stress, according to the World Health Organization. Burnout often includes emotional exhaustion, negative feelings or mental distance from one’s job, and a low sense of accomplishment at work. COVID-19 increased feelings of burnout in primary care physicians, and a new study, sought to understand primary care clinicians’ perspectives on burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic, the causes of burnout, and strategies to improve clinician well-being.  Inefficiencies of electronic health records systems and high levels of documentation contribute ...

XRCC1: A potential prognostic and immunological biomarker in low-grade gliomas

XRCC1: A potential prognostic and immunological biomarker in low-grade gliomas
2024-01-30
“We conducted a comprehensive investigation into the potential of XRCC1 as a valuable diagnostic and prognostic indicator in diverse cancer types.” BUFFALO, NY- January 30, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 16, Issue 1, entitled, “XRCC1: a potential prognostic and immunological biomarker in LGG based on systematic pan-cancer analysis.” X-ray repair cross-complementation ...

Functional bladder tissue regenerated using bone marrow cells

2024-01-30
Scientists from Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Northwestern University succeeded in regenerating fully functional urinary bladder tissue in a long-term study utilizing a non-human primate model. This unique model initially created by the Sharma Research Group explores long term bladder tissue regeneration at both anatomical and physiological levels. The Group used a novel biodegradable scaffold seeded with stem and progenitor cells from the animal’s own bone marrow, which demonstrated a higher degree of success than intestinal segments ...

Tribal program takes addiction treatment on the road

2024-01-30
With the national opioid epidemic disproportionately affecting American Indians and Alaska Natives, a tribal confederation in Oregon decided to take matters into their own hands. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde not only opened Oregon’s first tribally owned opioid treatment program in Salem in 2021, but a year later, the tribe also began what is believed to be the nation’s first tribally operated mobile medication unit. The mobile bus runs a daily circuit from the tribal reservation in Grand Ronde to McMinnville to Salem, seeing patients and dispensing medications directly to tribal members struggling with an opioid use disorder. The program appears ...

The emergence of successive SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern during 2020-22 created a need to understand the drivers of such growth

The emergence of successive SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern during 2020-22 created a need to understand the drivers of such growth
2024-01-30
The emergence of successive SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern during 2020-22 created a need to understand the drivers of such growth; this study uses a Bayesian model to reveal how a set of key covariates (the infecting variant, symptom status, age and number of prior exposures) affect viral kinetics at both individual and population levels   ##### In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology:   http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3002463 Article Title: Combined analyses of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Antibody halts triple-negative breast cancer in preclinical models

Planned birth at term reduces pre-eclampsia in those at high risk

Penguins starved to death en masse, study warns, as some populations off South Africa estimated to have fallen 95% in just eight years

New research explains how our brains store and change memories

Space shuttle lessons: Backtracks can create breakthroughs

New study finds cystic fibrosis drug allows patients to safely scale back lung therapies

From field to lab: Rice study reveals how people with vision loss judge approaching vehicles

Study highlights underrecognized link between kidney disease and cognitive decline

Researchers find link between psychosocial stress and early signs of heart inflammation in women

Research spotlight: How long-acting injectable treatment could transform care for postpartum women with HIV

Preempting a flesh-eating fly’s return to California

Software platform helps users find the best hearing protection

Clean hydrogen breakthrough: Chemical lopping technology with Dr. Muhammad Aziz (full webinar)

Understanding emerges: MBL scientists visualize the creation of condensates

Discovery could give investigators a new tool in death investigations

Ultrasonic pest control to protect beehives

PFAS mixture disrupts normal placental development which is important for a healthy pregnancy

How sound moves on Mars

Increasing plant diversity in agricultural grasslands boosts yields, reducing reliance on fertilizer

Scientists uncover a new role for DNA loops in repairing genetic damage

AI chatbots can effectively sway voters – in either direction

Study reveals 'levers' driving the political persuasiveness of AI chatbots

'Tiny' tyrannosaurid, Nanotyrannus lancensis, was a distinctive species, not juvenile T. Rex

Scientists capture first detailed look inside droplet-like structures of compacted DNA

Return of the short (tyrant) king: A new paper by Dinosaur Institute researcher shows Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. Rex

New study confirms Nanotyrannus holotype was distinct species from T. rex

Carnegie Science names Michael Blanton 12th Observatories Director

From mice to humans in five years: Microglia replacement paving the way for neurodegenerative disease therapies

To treat long COVID, we must learn from historical chronic illnesses, medical researchers say

Volcanic eruptions set off a chain of events that brought the Black Death to Europe

[Press-News.org] New interview with Eric Topol, MD, on the state of artificial intelligence in precision oncology