City
Epaper

New AI-powered tool to transform type 1 diabetes diagnosis, treatment

By IANS | Updated: June 7, 2025 10:38 IST

New Delhi, June 7 Australian researchers have pioneered a new artificial intelligence (AI)-powered tool to assess the risk ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 7 Australian researchers have pioneered a new artificial intelligence (AI)-powered tool to assess the risk of developing type 1 diabetes (T1D).

The tool, developed by researchers at Western Sydney University, predicts treatment responses, potentially changing how the disease is diagnosed and managed.

The tool utilises an innovative risk score -- Dynamic Risk Score (DRS4C) which can classify individuals as having or not having T1D.

It is based on microRNAs -- small RNA molecules measured from blood -- to help accurately capture the changing risk of T1D.

"T1D risk prediction is timely, with therapies that can delay T1D progression becoming recognised and available. Since early-onset T1D before the age of 10 years is particularly aggressive and linked to up to 16 years of reduced life expectancy, accurately predicting progression gives doctors a powerful tool to intervene sooner," said Professor Anand Hardikar, lead investigator from the University's School of Medicine and Translational Health Research Institute.

In their article published in the journal Nature Medicine, the research analysed molecular data in 5,983 study samples from participants across India, Australia, Canada, Denmark, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and the US, to develop DRS4C.

In addition to T1D risk and drug efficacy prediction, the risk score could potentially discriminate T1D from Type 2 diabetes.

Dr. Mugdha Joglekar, lead researcher, from the School of Medicine and Translational Health Research Institute at the University, explained the difference between genetic and dynamic risk markers, adding that genetic testing offered a static view of risk.

"Genetic markers identify lifelong risk, it's like knowing you live in a flood zone, but dynamic risk scores offer a real-time check on the rising water levels; it reflects current risk rather than a lifelong sentence, allowing for timely and adaptive monitoring without stigma," said Joglekar.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessCabinet approves 1,720 MW hydro-electric project in Arunachal for Rs 26,069 crore

NationalCabinet approves 1,720 MW hydro-electric project in Arunachal for Rs 26,069 crore

NationalMP: CM Yadav instructs collectors, SDMs to ensure easy, accessible arrangements for farmers at procurement centres

InternationalAwami League slams Yunus for pushing Bangladesh to 'brink of disaster'

TechnologyCabinet approves 1st hydro project in Arunachal’s Lohit Basin for Rs 14,105 crore

Health Realted Stories

HealthJharkhand HC seeks detailed probe report on HIV-infected blood transfusion in Chaibasa

HealthTejashwi Yadav targets Health Minister Mangal Pandey over viral Gaya hospital video

Health‘Poshan Pakhwada 2026’ to focus on maximising brain development in 1st 6 years of life

HealthTurmeric Milk Benefits: Know When to Drink It for Best Results

HealthWhat Is Second-Hand Stress? How Others’ Anxiety Can Affect Your Mental Health