2017
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2017.35.15_suppl.e18166
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Cognitive computing in oncology: A qualitative assessment of IBM Watson for Oncology in Mexico.

Abstract: e18166 Background: Watson for Oncology (WFO) is a Memorial Sloan Kettering trained cognitive computing system designed to extract structured and unstructured data from medical records; ingest a large body of published evidence and guidelines; and provide evidence-based treatment options tailored to an individual patient. In Mexico, 160,000 new cases of cancer are diagnosed per year, causing almost 80,000 deaths. 70% of cases are diagnosed at a late stage (Secretariat of Health, 2016). Given the burden of canc… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Physicians also chose chemotherapy instead of WfO's recommended medication because the medication was too expensive for patients. Similar challenges were found for WfO users in Mexico and Thailand [19,28]. In Mexico, clinicians deviated from WfO's recommendations due to the high costs associated with them and the fact that they did not adhere to Mexican cancer treatment guidelines [19].…”
Section: Disadvantages and Concernsmentioning
confidence: 73%
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“…Physicians also chose chemotherapy instead of WfO's recommended medication because the medication was too expensive for patients. Similar challenges were found for WfO users in Mexico and Thailand [19,28]. In Mexico, clinicians deviated from WfO's recommendations due to the high costs associated with them and the fact that they did not adhere to Mexican cancer treatment guidelines [19].…”
Section: Disadvantages and Concernsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Similar challenges were found for WfO users in Mexico and Thailand [19,28]. In Mexico, clinicians deviated from WfO's recommendations due to the high costs associated with them and the fact that they did not adhere to Mexican cancer treatment guidelines [19]. In Thailand, oncologists preferred basing their treatment recommendations on other countries' guidelines instead of US guidelines [28].…”
Section: Disadvantages and Concernsmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…“Cancer Drug Interactions” (https://cancer-druginteractions.org/), which is endorsed by the British Oncology Pharmacy Association, allows users to select from a list of anticancer drugs and commonly prescribed concomitant medications and obtain information on whether a DDI is likely, together with the rationale and quality of evidence. Watson for Oncology (https://www.ibm.com/watson/health/oncology-and-genomics/oncology/) is an artificial intelligence system that extracts data from medical records and provides evidence-based treatment options tailored to the individual patient 142,143. Lexicomp Online (http://www.lexi.com) and Micromedex 2.0 (http://micromedex.com) both include interactive tools for evaluation of drug interactions 144.…”
Section: Ddis: Aids For Clinical Decision-makingmentioning
confidence: 99%