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AI can now design new antibiotics in a matter of days

AI can now design new antibiotics in a matter of days | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

Imagine you’re a scientist who needs to discover a new antibiotic to fight off a scary disease. How would you go about finding it?

 

Typically, you’d have to test lots and lots of different molecules in the lab until you find one that has the necessary bacteria-killing properties. You might find some contenders that are good at killing the bacteria only to realize that you can’t use them because they also prove toxic to humans. It’s a very long, very expensive, and probably very aggravating process.

 

But what if, instead, you could just type into your computer the properties you’re looking for and have your computer design the perfect molecule for you?

 

That’s the general approach IBM researchers are taking, using an AI system that can automatically generate the design of molecules for new antibiotics.

 

In a new paper, published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, the researchers detail how they’ve already used it to quickly design two new antimicrobial peptides — small molecules that can kill bacteria — that are effective against a bunch of different pathogens in mice.

 

Normally, this molecule discovery process would take scientists years. The AI system did it in a matter of days.

 

That’s great news, because we urgently need faster ways to create new antibiotics.

How IBM’s AI system works

IBM’s new AI system relies on something called a generative model. To understand it at its simplest level, we can break it down into three basic steps.

 

First, the researchers start with a massive database of known peptide molecules.

 

Then the AI pulls information from the database and analyzes the patterns to figure out the relationship between molecules and their properties. It might find that when a molecule has a certain structure or composition, it tends to perform a certain function.

 

This allows it to “learn” the basic rules of molecule design.

 

Finally, researchers can tell the AI exactly what properties they want a new molecule to have. They can also input constraints (for example: low toxicity, please!). Using this info on desirable and undesirable traits, the AI then designs new molecules that satisfy the parameters. The researchers can pick the best one from among them and start testing on mice in a lab.

 

The IBM researchers claim that their approach outperformed other leading methods for designing new antimicrobial peptides by 10 percent. They found that they were able to design two new antimicrobial peptides that are highly potent against diverse pathogens, including multidrug-resistant K. pneumoniae, a bacterium known for causing infections in hospital patients. Happily, the peptides had low toxicity when tested in mice, an important signal about their safety (though not everything that’s true for mice ends up being generalizable to humans).

 

read the original unedited article at  https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/22360573/ai-ibm-design-new-antibiotics-covid-19-treatments

 

read the paper by the IBM researchers - Accelerated antimicrobial discovery via deep generative models and molecular dynamics simulations

nrip's insight:

This is an exciting paper to read. Using AI to identify brand-new types of antibiotics by training a neural network is not new and has been/is being explored in a number of labs around the world, Last year we read about the use of AI to predict which molecules will have bacteria-killing properties. Slowly but surely as more research builds upon more research in this space, we will be exploring using data driven personalized medicines which will be tailored to individuals rather than generalized on a best case fit.

 

But will a day ever come when we have medicines which have no side effects?

 

What do you think?

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IBM Watson Health teams with ADA to Tackle Diabetes

IBM Watson Health teams with ADA to Tackle Diabetes | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

IBM Watson Health is teaming with the American Diabetes Association to apply cognitive computing to the ADA's 66 years worth of research and data. The results will be used to help entrepreneurs, developers, healthcare providers, and patients learn more about diabetes, prevention, complications, and care

 

In 2012, according to the ADA, 29 million people were living with the disease, and another 86 million were diagnosed with a condition known as prediabetes.

 

To address the challenge, IBM Watson Health and the ADA are collaborating to apply Watson cognitive computing to the organization's massive library of information and data. Through this effort, IBM and ADA hope to empower entrepreneurs, developers, healthcare providers, and patients to gain knowledge that can improve outcomes and even prevent the condition's onset.

 

First, IBM's AI platform will ingest all the medical journals, medical text books, Pub Med, and other diabetes literature and resources available, including all the content from the ADA's Diabetes Information Center. Second,  Watson will ingest the ADA's diabetes data sets. 

 

Watson will be trained to understand the diabetes data to identify potential risk factors and create evidence-based insights that can be applied to health decisions.

 

IBM also is collaborating with the Health Maintenance Organization Maccabi Healthcare services to build a predictive machine learning model to help identify early risks for diabetic retinopathy, the top cause of blindness for those with diabetes.

 

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Doctors will routinely use your DNA to keep you well

Doctors will routinely use your DNA to keep you well | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

Learn how doctors will be able to develop targeted cancer therapy based on you and your cancer’s genetics.


How to personalize cancer treatment


Once a doctor sequences your full genome as well as your cancer’s DNA, mapping that information to the right treatment is difficult. Today, these types of DNA-based plans, where available, can take weeks or even months. Cognitive systems will decrease these times, while increasing the availability by providing doctors with information they can use to quickly build a focused treatment plan in just days or even minutes – all via the cloud.


Within five years, deep insights based on DNA sequencing will be accessible to more doctors and patients to help tackle cancer. By using cognitive systems that continuously learn about cancer and the patients who have cancer, the level of care will only improve. No more assumptions about cancer location or type, or any disease with a DNA link, like heart disease and stroke.


more at http://www.research.ibm.com/cognitive-computing/machine-learning-applications/targeted-cancer-therapy.shtml#fbid=2VHk6CaxW6l


directly view the video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=0M1DMdc1mQ0

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Head of IBM Watson Health leaving post after growing criticism

Head of IBM Watson Health leaving post after growing criticism | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

After 3 years as head of IBM’s health division, Deborah DiSanzo is leaving her role.

 

A company spokesman said that DiSanzo will no longer lead IBM Watson Health, the Cambridge-based division that has pitched the company’s famed artificial intelligence capabilities as solutions for a myriad of health challenges, like treating cancer and analyzing medical images.

 

Even as it has heavily advertised the potential of Watson Health, IBM has not met lofty expectations in some areas. Its flagship cancer software, which used artificial intelligence to recommend courses of treatment, has been ridiculed by some doctors inside and outside of the company. 

 

And it has struggled to integrate different technologies from other businesses it has acquired, laying off employees in the process.

 

more at https://www.statnews.com/2018/10/19/head-of-ibm-watson-health-leaving-post/

 

 

nrip's insight:

Over the years IBM Watson promised much to the healthcare world and delivered pretty much nothing.  I must say, reading up about IBM Watson taught me a thing or more about marketing :). Given that there is definitely good stuff being worked on within IBM, I hope that IBM will learn that healthcare requires patience and accuracy, and Watson will someday start doing good for healthcare.

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Apple, IBM team to work on mHealth apps

Apple, IBM team to work on mHealth apps | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

It’s one of those thoughts many mHealth insiders and observers have at some point had: What if one could put the power of Watson analytics into a smartphone and interact with it like Apple’s Siri at the point of care?


Well, that specific dream moved closer to reality on Tuesday when Apple and IBM joined forces to create a mobile platform christened IBM Mobile First for iOS.


“For the first time ever we’re putting IBM’s renowned big data analytics at iOS users’ fingertips,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a prepared statement. “This is a radical step for enterprise and something that only Apple and IBM can deliver.”


IBM CEO Ginni Rometty added that the intention is to bring the same “innovations [that] have transformed our lives,” into the ways that people work, thereby “allowing people to re-imagine work, industries, and professions.”


To that end, the companies hope that IBM Mobile First for iOS will “transform enterprise mobility through a new class of business apps,” they explained.


It’s not all that often technology giants align and rattle off healthcare as one of their target verticals, much less that Apple joins forces with any of the IT old guard — which gives the partnership a booster shot of luster. And in an mHealth industry currently going like gangbusters with too many startups to count, the sheer scale that Apple and IBM bring at the very least has the potential for significant market-shaping.

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