One Man, His Dog, and ChatGPT: Australia's AI Vaccine Saga
An Australian man used AI tools including ChatGPT to develop a custom mRNA vaccine for his dog, leading to partial remission of terminal mast cell cancer, researchers said.
- On Monday, Australian AI consultant Paul Conyngham revealed he used artificial intelligence to design a personalized experimental treatment for his eight-year-old rescue dog, Rosie, who had terminal mast cell cancer.
- After Rosie's cancer was misdiagnosed for nearly a year, Conyngham turned to ChatGPT and other AI models to research therapies, spending $3,000 to sequence her genome and analyze DNA data.
- Utilizing AlphaFold, which won 2024's chemistry Nobel, Conyngham collaborated with UNSW to create and administer the custom mRNA vaccine targeting her mutated genes.
- Rosie's largest tumor has shrunk dramatically and she is in partial remission, though UNSW director Pall Thordarson cautioned the "short answer is we don't know for sure" what caused the reduction.
- OpenAI boss Sam Altman called the effort an "amazing story" on Friday, yet experts like Assistant Professor Nick Semenkovich noted the lack of published scientific details makes it difficult to verify the vaccine's efficacy.
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35 Articles
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On social media, the story of an Australian AI consultant, Viral, has identified with ChatGPT, AlphaFold and Grok a possible treatment approach for the incurable cancer of his female Rosie. High-ranking actors in the AI industry share the story as proof of the future of AI in medicine, but there is no evidence of the effect of the developed drug. The article OpenAI CEOs celebrate AI vaccine against dog cancer, researchers criticise story as unpr…
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