At the MedTech_IA event last June, Jean-François Pomerol (CEO of Tribun Health) and Céline Riou (AI Product Manager) outlined a simple but powerful idea: artificial intelligence is no longer something to aspire to “someday” in pathology, it’s here, it works, and it’s already making a meaningful difference.
They laid out a concrete, step-by-step view of how AI can help address some of healthcare’s toughest challenges today: rising cancer incidence, a global shortage of pathologists, and an always growing complexity.
We’re entering an era where the question is no longer if we should apply AI to pathology workflows, but how fast we can deploy it responsibly and effectively.
Behind every slide is a person, waiting. When cancer is suspected, the journey usually starts with a biopsy. But in many cases, weeks can pass before a precise diagnosis. The disease doesn’t wait.
The mission is clear: shorten the time from suspicion to certainty, while maintaining the highest standards of accuracy and reproducibility. That’s where AI fits in, not as magic, but as a set of smart, targeted tools that help people work faster and better.
Here are four examples Tribun Health shared during the event:
It’s a simple idea with big impact: fewer delays, fewer distractions, and more time focused on what matters.
This not only saves time but ensures results are more reproducible, something every patient deserves.
This is a perfect example of technology complementing human judgment, ensuring that the most critical patients are seen first.
It’s about removing the busywork so doctors can spend their time where their expertise is truly needed.
AI isn’t about replacing pathologists; it’s about empowering them.
By applying machine learning at every stage, from image quality assurance to analysis assistance, report structuring and system integration, an entire workflow is transformed to become faster, more reliable and more resilient.
It’s not one big disruption. It’s a series of pragmatic improvements. The cumulative effect is profound:
What stands out the most in the approach presented by Jean-François and Céline is its practicality and the clear intent to stay grounded in real-world conditions.
These tools don’t pretend to replace the expertise and judgment of trained professionals. They simply make it easier for them to do their best work faster, more consistently, and with less cognitive burden.
That’s exactly the kind of innovation we need in healthcare: technology that enhances humanity rather than competes with it.
In a world where qualified professionals are scarce and diseases are becoming increasingly complex, AI helps ensure that every patient receives not only a faster diagnosis, but also one that is more precise and detailed, a critical requirement at a time when treatments are becoming more targeted, personalized, and technically sophisticated. Identifying the right therapy requires a deep understanding of each individual case, and that’s precisely where AI brings greater consistency and rigor.
🔗 You can watch the full presentation by Jean-François Pomerol and Céline Riou on YouTube.
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