Endoscopic AI maker AI Medical Service scores $70M in Series C funding

It plans to develop an in-house cloud platform.
By Adam Ang
10:34 pm
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Credit: AI Medical Service

Japanese medtech firm AI Medical Service has raised 8 billion yen ($70 million) in a Series C funding round led by Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank Vision Fund 2, along with other existing investors Globis Capital Partners, World Innovation Lab, and Incubate Fund.

AIM develops an AI decision support tool for endoscopists who are screening for abnormalities, including signs of gastrointestinal cancer, in the whole digestive tract.

WHAT IT'S FOR

Based on a press statement, proceeds from the latest investing event will be used to boost the company's global business development, such as conducting joint R&D with medical institutions and hiring talent for its international expansion.

The new funds will also be used to develop its in-house cloud platform to broaden the access to its endoscopic AI. Currently, its AI solution is being distributed on-premise.

WHY IT MATTERS

AIM is working to promote the early detection of GI cancer by leveraging AI to enhance endoscopic diagnostics. GI cancer is responsible for over a quarter of all cancer deaths worldwide and around 30% of cancer mortalities in Japan. According to the company, many cases of GI cancer can be treated successfully upon early detection but prospects of recovery diminish when it is found at a later stage.

"Making the most of the strong support received from the SoftBank Group, we will simultaneously contribute to the advancement of endoscopic medicine and save lives around the world by increasing the chances of early-stage cancer detection. This large-scale financing round enables us to step into the global stage more confidently than ever before," AIM CEO Tomohiro Tada commented.

MARKET SNAPSHOT

More AI screening tools for endoscopy have popped up across Asia-Pacific in recent years. Japanese IT and electronics firm NEC unveiled last year its WISE VISION Endoscopy, an AI software that automatically marks potential lesions from photos taken during endoscopic procedures.

The Chinese startup Wision AI also offers EndoScreener, its AI-powered polyp detection software, which was given a CE mark in Europe in November.

Meanwhile, in the US, there is GI Genius, a device that uses AI to spot polyps in real-time during colonoscopies. Manufactured by Cosmo Pharmaceuticals and distributed by Medtronic, the AI tool was granted De Novo authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration last year.

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