Google makes AI tool for precision medicine open source
Google announced Monday an open source version of DeepVariant, the artificial intelligence tool that last year earned the highest accuracy rating at the precisionFDA’s Truth Challenge.
Google announced Monday an open source version of DeepVariant, the artificial intelligence tool that last year earned the highest accuracy rating at the precisionFDA’s Truth Challenge.
The open source tool comes as academic medical centers, hospitals, insurance companies and other healthcare organizations are gearing up for if not already embarking on artificial intelligence, cognitive computing and machine learning as well as precision medicine and the genomic sequencing that entails.
Likewise, Google rivals IBM and Microsoft are all moving into the healthcare AI space while much speculation surrounds Apple and Amazon making forays into the space.
Google Brain Team members Mark DePristo and Ryan Poplin explained that by open sourcing DeepVariant, which was created with Google’s Verily company, they hope to encourage its use and collaboration.
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“To further this goal, we partnered with Google Cloud Platform to deploy DeepVariant workflows on GCP, available today, in configurations optimized for low-cost and fast turnarounds using scalable GCP technologies like the Pipelines API,” they wrote in a Google blog. “This paired set of releases provides a smooth ramp for users to explore and evaluate the capabilities of DeepVariant in their current compute environment while providing a cloud-based solution to satisfy the needs of even the largest genomics datasets.”
DeepVariant addresses one of precision medicine’s outstanding challenges by improving the accuracy of high-throughput sequencing which generates “just 100 of the 3 billion paired bases, and per-base error rates range from 0.1-10 percent,” DePristo and Poplin noted, adding that those paired bases are organized into 23 pairs of chromosomes.
To build DeepVariant, the Google Brain team started with reference genomes from the Genome in a Bottle Consortium to create tens of millions of examples for encoding high-throughput sequencing data. The next step was training a Google TensorFlow classification model to distinguish between the true genome and the experimental data, DePristo and Poplin said. They added that DeepVariant won the highest accuracy rate in the FDA’s precisionFDA Truth Challenge in 2016 and, since then, Google has cut the tool’s error rate by more than 50 percent.
Microsoft, for its part, launched a new U.K-based unit focusing on AI for healthcare in September of 2017 after aligning with UPMC in a strategic partnership to advance artificial intelligence and released new products including HealthVault Insights, Microsoft Genomics, a chatbot and Project InnerEye for radiotherapy.
IBM Watson has been focusing on healthcare AI since its 2015 acquisitions of both Phytel and Explorys and has added Watson for Genomics and Watson for Oncology to the supercomputer’s portfolio.
Google said DeepVariant is part of its overarching goal to apply its technologies to healthcare and other scientific disciplines and ultimately make the tools and data accessible to a wide range of people.
“DeepVariant is the first of what we hope will be many contributions that leverage Googles computing infrastructure and machine learning to both better understand the genome and to provide deep learning-based genomics tools to the community,” DePristo and Poplin said.
http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/google-makes-ai-tool-precision-medicine-open-source
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