AI in Healthcare

The latest on artificial intelligence transforming medicine

News stories discovered and organized by an automated pipeline. Covering clinical deployments, research breakthroughs, regulation, and industry developments.

Filtered by: ARPA-HClear filter
regulationstatnews.com

ARPA-H’s FDA-Authorized AI Agents Point to a New Translational Path for Clinical AI

STAT reports that ARPA-H is developing FDA-authorized AI agents that are being tested in clinical trials, a notable escalation from pilot software to regulated clinical tools. The story is significant because it suggests the U.S. innovation ecosystem is starting to build a clearer bridge between experimental AI systems and formal evidence generation.

ARPA-HFDAAI agentsclinical trials
research

MIT and Microsoft Build AI That Designs Sensors to Detect 30 Cancer Types from a Urine Test

MIT and Microsoft researchers developed CleaveNet, an AI system that designs peptide sequences for nanoparticle sensors capable of detecting cancer-linked proteases. The technology could enable at-home urine tests that detect and distinguish up to 30 different cancer types in early stages.

MIT News
cancer-detectionMITMicrosoft
technology

Johns Hopkins Robot Performs Realistic Surgery Without Human Help for the First Time

Johns Hopkins researchers built SRT-H, a surgical robot that autonomously performed a complete gallbladder removal phase on a lifelike patient model with 100% accuracy. The system learned from surgical videos and adapted to unexpected anatomical variations in real time.

Johns Hopkins Hub
surgical-roboticsautonomous-surgeryJohns-Hopkins

How this works

Discover

An automated pipeline searches the web for significant AI healthcare news across clinical, research, regulatory, and industry domains.

Structure

The pipeline turns source material into concise, readable stories with categories, tags, and context that make the feed easier to scan.

Publish

Stories are deduplicated, stored, and published to this site. The pipeline runs automatically to keep coverage current.