Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced a $10 million commitment to support pediatric health care research and understanding rare diseases. The announcement was made at the AWS Summit in Washington, D.C.
The funding aims to provide critical support to nonprofit institutions harnessing AWS cloud technology to advance children’s health care worldwide.
The initiative includes a $3 million philanthropic commitment distributed among three organizations: Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C.; Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio; and the Children’s Brain Tumor Network at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP). Each organization will receive $1 million to support their mission-driven work.
The remaining $7 million will be available through the AWS IMAGINE Grant: Children’s Health Innovation Award. This grant will fund projects that accelerate pediatric research, advance maternal and child health, and empower the pediatric workforce and caregivers.
Nicole Giroux, founder of the Lilabean Foundation for Pediatric Brain Cancer Research, highlighted the importance of such funding. Her daughter Lila was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer at 15 months old, and it took five years to get a precise diagnosis due to a lack of data.
AWS’s initiative aims to support a consortium of hospitals and institutions using cloud computing and artificial intelligence to accelerate research and discoveries. By managing data in the cloud, researchers can better understand the genetic makeup of diseases, leading to quicker and more accurate diagnoses and personalized treatments.
Adam Resnick, director of the Center for Data Driven Discovery in Biomedicine at CHOP, emphasised the importance of this initiative. “Despite being a rare disease, pediatric cancers provide a unique proving ground for new technology due to their dependency on real-time discovery and collaborative networks,” Resnick said.
Researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital use AWS cloud tools to compute on genomic data and share diagnostic results for pediatric cancer patients across the U.S. The anonymized data is shared with the NCI Childhood Cancer Database, allowing broader access for researchers.
Elaine Mardis, co-executive director of the Steve and Cindy Rasmussen Institute for Genomic Medicine at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, explained the impact of sharing data in cloud-based databases. This allows for better identification of genomic aspects of rare cancers, attracting more scientific attention.
AI-powered applications are also being used to screen babies for rare genetic conditions and to provide low-cost, portable ultrasound imaging for rheumatic heart disease in resource-limited settings. In Uganda, for instance, 200,000 children are expected to be screened for rheumatic heart disease in the coming years.
Marius George Linguraru, Connor Family Professor and Chair of Research and Innovation at Children’s National Hospital, discussed the application of AI in personalizing cancer treatment plans for children with brain tumors.
AWS’s commitment aims to improve the outlook for families dealing with pediatric diseases, providing more options and better treatment plans. “For every family that’s diagnosed, I want their child to have options,” Giroux said.
AWS’s philanthropic efforts will empower nonprofit institutions worldwide to leverage the power of cloud computing and AI to advance pediatric health care.