AI Radiotherapy Cuts Cancer Side Effects in Mexico

A woman lying on a medical imaging table, with laser lines projected on her body, preparing for a scan inside a machine.$# CAPTION

Mexico City, Mexico — Artificial intelligence is transforming radiotherapy, delivering greater precision, fewer side effects, and a new era in the fight against cancer in Mexico. This marks a significant evolution for a medical field with over 150 years of history.

A Medical Evolution with Over a Century of History

Radiotherapy has been a pillar of medicine for more than 150 years. For decades, it has been one of the mainstays of cancer treatment, combined with surgery and chemotherapy. However, its principal challenge has always remained the same: to destroy cancerous cells without excessively damaging healthy tissue. Today, that story is taking an unexpected turn thanks to artificial intelligence applied in new-generation linear accelerators, a technology that promises to change how we understand oncological treatment.

Artificial Intelligence in the Fight Against Cancer

The ABC Hospital in Mexico is a pioneer in Latin America, being the first in the region to feature a linear accelerator equipped with AI. Dolores de la Mata, head of the radiotherapy service, explained that this advancement not only increases the precision of radiation but also allows for the safe increase of dosage. The key lies in the system's capacity to analyze the body's movements and the tumor's position in real time, adjusting radiation shots with millimeter accuracy. This translates to a 30 to 50 percent reduction in side effects for patients.

A Change in Paradigm: From Lethal Cancer to Chronic Cancer

Specialists agree that innovations like this bring humanity closer to a historic scenario: turning cancer into a chronic and controllable disease. Dolores de la Mata summarized it with hope: "With artificial intelligence, we can dream of a future in which cancer is not synonymous with a death sentence, but with long-term management."

The Patient Experience

Stories from patients like María, 52, show the real impact. Diagnosed with breast cancer, she was one of the first to receive AI-powered radiotherapy in Mexico. After weeks of treatment, she reported that her side effects were minimal compared to what she had read about and feared. "I could keep walking, doing my daily activities, and I did not feel the extreme exhaustion that other patients describe. I felt my body was respected," she recounted.

Mexico and Latin America at the Medical Vanguard

That Mexico is the first country in Latin America with this technology is no coincidence. It represents an advancement in the democratization of access to high-precision healthcare and a step toward the modernization of the medical system in the region. AI in radiotherapy not only marks a scientific milestone but also a political and social one: it shows that innovation can reach beyond countries traditionally leading medical research.

The Future of Oncology with Artificial Intelligence

In the coming years, this type of equipment is expected to multiply in hospitals across the continent. The combination of intelligent algorithms, advanced radiotherapy, and specialized medical personnel heralds an era in which the fight against cancer will be increasingly human, less invasive, and more effective.


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