A supercomputer that can help advance
complex healthcare research
here is one of the key features
of a new innovation centre on
the Singapore General Hospital
(SGH) campus.
Launched on Friday, the Alice
Lee Innovation Centre of Excellence
@ SGH Campus (Alice @
SGH Campus) aims to accelerate
the development of innovations
such as medical technology and
digital healthcare solutions.
Named in memory of the late
Mrs Alice Lee, wife of the late rubber
tycoon and philanthropist Lee
Kong Chian, the centre is part of
the SingHealth Duke-NUS Academic
Medical Centre.
It is equipped with facilities such
as 3D design and simulation software,
a prototyping laboratory, and
space for researchers to design and
develop proof-of-concept models.
Among the new centre’s key features
is SingHealth’s first supercomputer
– dubbed Computational
Health Research and Optimisation
for Medical Advancements
(Chroma) – in collaboration with
National Supercomputing Centre
Singapore.
First announced in March 2022,
Chroma has 1,024 CPU (central
processing unit) cores, which provide
it with high-performance
computing capabilities that allow
for the processing of large amounts
of clinical data.
The SingHealth Duke-NUS Academic
Medical Centre said that
Chroma enables the training of artificial
intelligence (AI) models for
large-scale, complex research; the
development of AI algorithms for
the prediction of the risk of disease;
and facilitates personalised
medicine.
One of the projects the new supercomputer
is working on is the
training of the AI tool used in Apollo,
a national project that employs
AI to analyse scans of heart arteries
to determine if a patient has
cardiovascular disease.
National Supercomputing Centre
Singapore’s strategy, planning and
engagement director Bernard Tan noted that with cluster computing
– where a collection of computers
work together as a single entity –
the Apollo team would take between
six and eight months to conduct
simulations for its work.
“But now with a supercomputer,
they can actually reduce that to
one to two months,” he told reporters
on Friday.
SingHealth group chief executive
Ivy Ng said the new centre will
help forge new partnerships between
the healthcare cluster’s researchers
and industry partners to
“generate new ideas, prototypes
and smart technologies for better
disease prevention, diagnoses and
treatment”.
“The centre’s co-location with
our institutions on the SGH campus
is strategic, so that healthcare
professionals can bring unmet
clinical needs to the innovation table,
and work with partners to
ideate and test potential solutions
in a real-world setting,” Professor
Ng added.
In January, the Lee Foundation
donated $50 million to the Sing-
Health Duke-NUS Academic Medical
Centre to advance innovation
and research.
Located at the SingHealth Tower,
the 590 sq m centre is the first of
several such facilities which will be
introduced across SingHealth’s
hospital campuses.
Alice @ SGH Campus’ clinical director,
Associate Professor Henry
Ho, noted that different parts of
Singapore may have different
healthcare needs.
“We want to make sure that (future
centres) can have a much closer
proximity to what is needed
from different segments of the
population in Singapore,” he said.
The new centre was launched by
Second Minister for Trade and Industry
Tan See Leng during the
opening of the seventh SingHealth
Duke-NUS Scientific Congress,
held at the Academia building on
the SGH campus.
The event highlighted population
health initiatives such as the
Empower app – which uses AI to
provide users with personalised
reminders to engage in healthy lifestyle
choices, to manage chronic
diseases such as diabetes and hypertension
– and Dr Buddy, a chatbot
supporting SingHealth’s Mobile
Inpatient Care @ Home initiative.
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