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The Tech World's Quest to Accelerate A Cure For Cancer

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I have had the privilege of covering the tech market for the past 38 years. During this time, I have observed that there is one major theme I have seen over and over again when it comes to the goals of many tech innovators. They believe and have faith that the technology they create can change the world. I have frequently heard tech executives say how they think their inventions or technology are world-changing devices or services.

From a historical perspective, that is very true. Technologies like the Gutenberg Press, the Steam Engine, Edison’s light bulbs, Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone or more recent inventions like the semiconductor, PC, and smartphones have indeed been world-changing in what they do and how they drive new industries and the world’s economies.

Steve Jobs was one of the most vocal on this topic and in many speeches talked about Apple’s goal to change the world. Some of his products, especially the iPod, iPhone and the iPad have been world-changing devices in terms of how they expanded personal computing, communications, and entertainment.  Products like Facebook and Twitter have had a huge impact on connecting people around the world in ways we could not have imagined even 10 years ago.

And one of our generations greatest tech innovators,  Dean Kamen, who is best known for creating the Segway, invented the Insulin Pump, which has changed the lives of Type 1 and some Type 2 diabetics around the world. https://www.firstinspires.org/about/leadership/dean-kamen

However, I have been wondering if Silicon Valley, with its innovative thinkers and problem-solving skills, took a stronger aim at some of the huge problems we have in healthcare and especially in finding cures for diseases like cancer, diabetes, and other major illnesses, how this could impact the fight against life-threatening problems.

I think most of us either know of people who have had cancer or have it themselves and surely want a cure for this awful disease. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s son died from cancer and he has devoted his life to what he calls a “moonshot” to try and find a cure. There has been great work and serious strides in the world of health science done to deal with cancer but, even with these advances, there is still no actual cure.

It turns out that traditional tech companies have been pretty active in cancer research for some time. It accelerated in 2016 with major announcements from three large tech firms. One of the initiatives of a major Silicon Valley-based company was from NVIDIA who, along with key government and private organizations, has made finding a cure for cancer a high priority.

In 2016, NVIDIA announced it was teaming up with the National Cancer Institute, the US Department of Energy (DOE) and several national laboratories on an initiative to accelerate cancer research. The research efforts include a focus on building an AI framework called CANDLE (Cancer Distributed Learning Environment), which will provide a common discovery platform that brings the power of AI to the fight against cancer. CANDLE will be the first AI framework designed to change the way we understand cancer, providing data scientists around the world with a powerful tool against this disease. https://candle.cels.anl.gov/

One of NVIDIA’s claims to fame is its incredible Graphical Processors (GPU) that help power some of the fastest supercomputers in the world. These processors are also at the heart of NVIDIA’s major push around something called Artificial Intelligence Deep Learning. These processors can handle billions of transactions per second and are central to a new data science technology used to mine data at its deepest levels and use AI and deep learning to try to find answers to big problems.

At the time of this announcement, NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang stated “GPU deep learning has given us a new tool to tackle grand challenges that have, up to now, been too complex for even the most powerful supercomputers. Together with the Department of Energy and the National Cancer Institute, we are creating an AI supercomputing platform for cancer research. This ambitious collaboration is a giant leap in accelerating one of our nation’s greatest undertakings, the fight against cancer.”

The cancer moonshot strategic computing partnership between the DOE and NCI to accelerate precision oncology includes three pilot projects that aim to provide a better understanding of how cancer grows; discover more effective, less toxic therapies than existing ones; and understand key drivers of their effectiveness outside the clinical trial setting, at the population level. Deep learning techniques are essential for each of these projects.

In 2017, NVIDIA also gave a grant of $400,000 to research teams involved with the Compute the Cure program from the NVIDIA Foundation, their employee-led philanthropic arm, to further their research. https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/2017/11/30/nvidia-foundation-cancer-research-grant/

NVIDIA is not the only tech company aiming at a cancer “moonshot.” IBM’s Watson has joined with the Veterans Affairs to launch a public/private partnership to provide veterans who have cancer a better chance for recovery. Watson is the supercomputer that won the television game show Jeopardy and is one of the most powerful AI-based computers in the world.

Another Silicon Valley company, Intel, has invested heavily in AI and deep learning research and is creating a new AI framework around their most powerful processors which will help power some of the biggest data projects in the world. In terms of cancer research, Intel has teamed up with the Oregon Health and Science Institute-Knight Cancer Center, the Ontario Institute of Cancer Research and the Dana Farber Cancer Institute to create a collaborative “cancer database” they will use to help advance the research on finding better ways to treat cancer as well as find a cure someday. https://www.dana-farber.org/newsroom/news-releases/2016/dana-farber-cancer-institute-and-ontario-institute-for-cancer-research-join-collaborative-cancer-cloud/

Given tech innovators quest to change the world and its immense problem-solving skills, having them turn their technology and mindset to target these diseases perhaps can help speed up the search for treatments and, ultimately, cures for cancer, diabetes and other major health maladies.

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