Skip to main content

Cancer, Intel is coming for you with the Collaborative Cancer Cloud

intel unveils collaborative cancer cloud
Medicine is going into the cloud. As the intersection between health and technology becomes more and more robust, an increasing number of tech companies are branching out into the medical field, leveraging their unique resources to help doctors and patients alike. The latest to enter the arena is Intel, which recently unveiled more details about its plan to fight cancer by way of the Collaborative Cancer Cloud, which would connect Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) to institutions in Boston, as well as in Austin, Texas.

The initial plan was first unveiled in 2013, when Intel announced that it was planning to help OHSU construct a research data center complete with Intel’s technology allowing for supercomputing powers and the study of tumors and their genomic profiles. Now, in the next phase, Intel has announced that their data analytics software, called Discovery Peak, is helping to process medical and health related information within the “cancer cloud.”

In the blog post revealing the newest developments, Eric Dishman, Intel’s health executive, wrote, “Each year millions of people all over the world, including more than 1 million patients in the United States, learn that they have a cancer diagnosis. Instead of going through painful chemotherapy that can kill healthy cells along with cancerous cells, what would happen if those patients were able to be treated as individuals based on their specific genome sequencing, and a precision treatment plan could be tailored specifically for their disease? And what if it could happen within 24 hours?”

Indeed, this is the goal towards which Intel and its Collaborative Cancer Cloud is striving. Dishman continued, “The Collaborative Cancer Cloud is a precision medicine analytics platform that allows institutions to securely share patient genomic, imaging and clinical data for potentially lifesaving discoveries. It will enable large amounts of data from sites all around the world to be analyzed in a distributed way, while preserving the privacy and security of that patient data at each site.”

Ultimately, Intel hopes that this project will allow doctors diagnose their patients “based on their genome and potentially arm clinicians with the data needed for a targeted treatment plan.” More ambitious still, DIshman says that within the next five years, by 2020, this entire process will happen in just 24 hours.

So hold your breath, cancer. Intel is coming for you, and hopefully, we’ll be kicking the disease to the curb in the near future.

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Intel Xe-HPG: Everything you need to know about Intel’s first gaming GPU
intel dg1 desktop first look ces 2020 02

With Xe, Intel has numerous integrated and discrete graphics options, but none explicitly designed for PC gaming. But soon, Intel will launch its first discrete gaming GPU, code-named, Xe-HPG. With a new DG2 graphics architecture, Intel's graphics cards could finally have the power to appeal to enthusiast gamers.

While details about the card are still scarce, Intel's gaming-focused GPU represents another premium option in the graphics card market, which, if successful, could help alleviate some of the shortages we've been seeing in 2021.

Read more
Intel reveals 11th-Gen desktop CPUs are coming in early 2021
10th Gen Intel Core processor on a motherboard.

In a blog post highlighting how advances in its processors have helped gamers, Intel announced that its next-generation desktop processor will be coming in early 2021. The 11th-gen processor is also known by its Rocket Lake code name, and will include some of the key features that Intel introduced in its 11th-gen laptop Tiger Lake processors, such as support for the faster PCIe 4.0 specification, and Wi-Fi 6 for wireless connectivity.

"I’m also happy to confirm that the next generation 11th-gen Intel Core desktop processors (code-named “Rocket Lake”) is coming in the first quarter of 2021 and will provide support for PCIe 4.0," Intel vice president and general manager of the VR, gaming, and e-sports group John Bonini wrote in a blog post on Medium, noting that "gaming is in Intel's DNA."

Read more
Tile is coming to future Intel devices, so you’ll never lose your laptop again
tile finding technology coming to all pcs laptop

Tile is famous for its trackers that attach to your everyday devices and items, and now that technology will be coming to your next computer. Tile's finding technology will soon be embedded in new laptops with Intel processors, helping make lost or stolen devices easier to find.

According to a press release, an updated Tile solution developed in partnership with Intel will be coming later this year for laptop makers to adopt in their devices. The solution will work even when a device is in sleep mode.

Read more