An AI built with Amazon software is monitoring cancer in Nigeria and Kenya.
The model, built using Amazon’s Bedrock AI service, saved oncologists 75% of the time spent handling specific care tasks during a beta test.
Using Amazon Web Service’s Bedrock tool, which helps build generative AI foundational models, Hurone has created AI models for oncology care within its own Gukiza AI toolkit.
In countries where oncologists are at a premium, Hurone claims, its AI model enables personalized treatment, generates fast patient data summaries, and makes the treatment and management of the disease more accurate.
Cancer cases are rising in Nigeria and Kenya
In Nigeria, Gukiza AI is being trialed at the Zenith Medical and Kidney Center in Abuja, the largest kidney cancer treatment facility in west Africa. Nigeria has one of the highest cancer mortality rates in the world, with roughly four out of five cases resulting in death, according to the Global Cancer Observatory. In 2020, it reported over 124,000 new cases and more than 78,000 deaths.
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In Kenya, Hurone’s software is being used at the Jaramogi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Kisumu, a medical center located in the country’s western region, and handles more than 5,000 cancer patients annually. Cancer is the second leading non-communicable cause of death after cardiovascular diseases in Kenya, with roughly 47,887 new cancer cases and 32,500 deaths recorded yearly.
How can an AI app help cancer patients?
Founded in 2021, Hurone trained Gukiza on open-source patient databases to recognize the progression and side effects of various forms of cancer. By monitoring patients remotely in what Kingsley Ndoh, Hurone’s founder, calls “underrepresented populations,” the AI is designed to feed doctors with real-time data.
On its website, Hurone says a beta version of Gukiza “reduced off-duty oncology calls by approximately 60% for cancer care teams in our partner sites,” while helping oncologists save “more than 75% of the time traditionally required to handle specific care responsibilities.”
Hurone is part of a $40 million AWS project, in which more than 90 organizations have received free cloud credits to help advance cancer treatment in the developing world. In January, Hurone also introduced its AI tool to Rwanda’s Breast Cancer Initiative East Africa medical center as a telemedicine solution, to save cancer patients traveling several miles to be diagnosed or monitored.
Sodiq Yusuf is a trained media practitioner and journalist with considerable years of experience in print, broadcast, and digital journalism. His interests cover a wide range of causes in politics, governance, sports, community development, and good governance.
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