Current:Home > MarketsHow AI is bringing new options to mammograms, other breast cancer screenings -FundPrime
How AI is bringing new options to mammograms, other breast cancer screenings
View
Date:2025-04-12 07:48:25
Artificial intelligence is transforming the health world in more ways than one, including as an additional tool in breast cancer screenings.
Physicians assisted by AI in mammography screening detected 20% more cancers, according to preliminary results from a study out earlier this year. And AI could help predict outcomes in invasive breast cancer, research from Northwestern Medicine published in the Nature Medicine journal Monday found, potentially making it possible to spare breast cancer patients unnecessary chemotherapy treatments.
For Tehillah Harris, these additional tools mean an extra set of eyes, especially as someone with a family history. She was only 32 when her mother died of breast cancer.
"My mom was very concerned about my level of risk," says Harris, who gets screened regularly at Mount Sinai in New York, where AI is used to assist reading mammograms and breast sonograms. "The doctor said they have this new technology, and would I be interested? I'm like, sure, sign me up."
Dr. Laurie Margolies, the director of breast imaging at Mount Sinai, demonstrated for CBS News how AI analyzes mammograms and sorts them into three levels of risk: low, intermediate and elevated.
AI is also being used to read breast sonograms — in one instance CBS News viewed, it only took a few seconds for the tool to make its analysis — though a radiologist also reads the scans.
"I think AI is here to help us in the same way that 30 years ago the magnifying glass helped us," Margolies says, adding she doesn't see the technology replacing human doctors.
"AI is not there to be empathetic. It just gives an opinion," she says. "It may not know somebody's family history in the future, and it certainly can't provide that hug."
While Harris welcomed the new screening tools, she also isn't ready to say goodbye to her doctors.
"You want someone to come and explain it to you, and if needed, hold your hand," she says.
- All your mammogram and breast cancer screening questions, answered by medical experts
- In:
- Breast Cancer
- Artificial Intelligence
- AI
Dr. Jonathan LaPook is the chief medical correspondent for CBS News.
TwitterveryGood! (114)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Teen arrested in Southern California restaurant shooting that injured 4 last month
- Oklahoma State surges into Top 25, while Georgia stays at No. 1 in US LBM Coaches Poll
- NBA highest-paid players in 2023-24: Who is No. 1 among LeBron, Giannis, Embiid, Steph?
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Reinstated wide receiver Martavis Bryant to work out for Cowboys, per report
- When is daylight saving time? Here's when we 'spring forward' in 2024
- US regulators to review car-tire chemical deadly to salmon after request from West Coast tribes
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- COP28 conference looks set for conflict after tense negotiations on climate damage fund
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- 'It's freedom': Cher on singing, her mother and her first holiday album, 'Christmas'
- In the Florida Everglades, a Greenhouse Gas Emissions Hotspot
- Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi goes on a hunger strike while imprisoned in Iran
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Colleges reporting surges in attacks on Jewish, Muslim students as war rages on
- Jalen Hurts' gutsy effort after knee injury sets tone for Eagles in win vs. Cowboys
- South Africa recalls ambassador and diplomatic mission to Israel and accuses it of genocide in Gaza
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Police say a gunman fired 22 shots into a Cincinnati crowd, killing a boy and wounding 5 others
Colleges reporting surges in attacks on Jewish, Muslim students as war rages on
NBA highest-paid players in 2023-24: Who is No. 1 among LeBron, Giannis, Embiid, Steph?
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
3 cities face a climate dilemma: to build or not to build homes in risky places
Moldova’s pro-Western government hails elections despite mayoral losses in capital and key cities
7 bystanders wounded in shooting at Texas college homecoming party, sheriff’s office says