With machine learning, we can use existing data to help clinicians better predict when disease will occur, diagnosing and treating it earlier, and personalising treatments, which will be less resource intensive and provides better health outcomes for our patients.
Professor Reza Razavi, AI Centre Director
29 August 2020
£16m grant awarded to the AI Centre to grow NHS AI capabilities
The substantial grant by the Office for Life Sciences will enable the AI Centre's programme of artificial intelligence research within the NHS
The London Medical Imaging & AI Centre for Value Based Healthcare has today been awarded a £16 million DHSC grant by the Office for Life Sciences to enable its programme of artificial intelligence research within the NHS to provide more innovative and accessible healthcare solutions to the public.
AI Centre Director, Professor Reza Razavi said the grant facilitates the Centre’s use of data and clinical research expertise.
“The AI Centre can continue its mission to spearhead innovations in AI-driven healthcare that will have significant impact on the clinical, research and broader community. Artificial intelligence technology provides significant opportunities to improve diagnostics and therapies as well as reduce administrative costs."
The AI Centre will install dedicated IT infrastructure to run multiple machine learning algorithms at once and create clinical applications for day-to-day patient care. The Centre will also use the funding to develop AI-enabled MRI and ultrasound machines, which will improve the speed, accuracy and reliability of imaging interpretation and diagnosis.
Ian Abbs, CEO at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust said: “This additional funding to support AI driven service transformation is hugely welcome as we know that this will be one of the most exciting areas of healthcare innovation in the next few years.
“AI technology has already shown its potential to improve care for our patients, and to drive safety and efficiency. It will support our clinicians to deliver the best possible diagnosis and treatment based on accumulated learning that is beyond that of even the most experienced clinician.”
Ian Abbs, CEO, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust
The AI Centre will use the funding to provide capabilities for the NHS to test and deploy a federated learning and interoperability platform to store, curate and analyse large volumes of clinical data securely, as well as an AI deployment engine which will enable the integration of algorithms directly into clinical workflows.
Delivering new technology infrastructure to the Trusts using a distributed machine learning approach to bring algorithms to the data, the AI Centre will ultimately provide to hospitals the capability to analyse large volumes of clinical information whilst preserving their local governance protocols.
Beverley Bryant, Chief Digital Information Officer at Guy’s and St Thomas’ and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trusts said: “We are looking forward to building new interoperability federated learning and artificial intelligence deployment platforms that will enable transformation of clinical diagnosis and treatments."
This grant will allow technologists, clinicians and data scientists to work together on innovative solutions for the NHS.
Beverley Bryant, Chief Digital Information Officer at Guy’s and St Thomas’ and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trusts
The grant also facilitates the AI Centre’s network expansion from 4 NHS Trusts to 11, including Brighton & Sussex University, East Kent Hospitals University, Imperial College Healthcare, Lewisham and Greenwich, Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells, Royal Brompton & Harefield and University College London NHS Trusts.
New partnerships have also commenced with University College London, and major industry collaborators, including GE Healthcare and NetApp.
Geraint Rees, Pro-Vice-Provost (AI) and Dean of the Faculty of Life Sciences at University College London, said that collaboration is vital to developing the AI solutions that benefit the widest possible range of patients, as no hospital or university can on its own collect the data required.
We are proud to partner with the AI Centre and bring our world leading expertise to bear in creating safe and secure AI-enabled healthcare systems that benefit citizens and patients across the UK.
Geraint Rees, Pro-Vice-Provost (AI) and Dean of the Faculty of Life Sciences at University College London
A consortium of academic, NHS and industry partners, the AI Centre is the digital health powerhouse within the St Thomas’ MedTech Hub, a major joint initiative between King’s School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, which aims to translate healthcare engineering research into medical products quickly and effectively.
The additional funding will enable the AI Centre to accelerate the development and testing of novel AI products for clinical use, at scale, while increasing collaborative ventures for our partners and benefiting from the strong research infrastructure within the MedTech Hub.
Sebastien Ourselin, Head of the King’s School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences
The grant is part of a £50 million UK Government funding boost which will scale up the work of existing Digital Pathology and Imaging Artificial Intelligence Centres of Excellence established last year to develop products to improve early diagnosis of disease. The funding aims to support the COVID-19 long-term response and is part of Government commitment to detect three quarters of cancers at an early stage by 2028.
“Technology is a force for good in our fight against the deadliest diseases – it can transform and save lives through faster diagnosis, free up clinicians to spend time with their patients and make every pound in the NHS go further.
Matt Hancock, Health and Social Care Secretary