The Scotsman

AI detects bowel cancer in less than a second

- By JOHN VON RADOWITZ

An intelligen­t computer programme that can pinpoint bowel cancer in less than a second could be used to diagnose patients.

The artificial intelligen­ce system was able to identify potentiall­y dangerous tumours from endoscopy images with clinical accuracy, experts have said.

Scientists used the programme to assess 306 colorectal polyps – growths in the bowel that may or may not be cancerous – in 250 men and women.

It took less than a second for the system to analyse each magnified endoscopic image and decide whether or not the polyp was malignant.

The programme correctly picked up 94 per cent of can- cers by matching each growth against more than 30,000 images that were used for machine learning.

Study leader Dr Yuichi Mori, from Showa University in Yokohama, Japan, said: “The most remarkable breakthrou­gh with this system is that artificial intelligen­ce enables real-time optical biopsy of colorectal polyps during colonoscop­y, regardless of the endoscopis­ts’ skill.

“This allows the complete resection of adenomatou­s (cancerous) polyps and prevents unnecessar­y polypectom­y (removal) of non-neoplastic polyps.

“We believe these results are acceptable for clinical applicatio­n and our immediate goal is to obtain regulatory approval for the diagnostic system.”

The results were presented in Barcelona.

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