Personalized ovarian cancer care using exercise and AI
Enhancing Personalized Care in Ovarian Cancer Through Prospective Exercise Interventions and AI-Driven Data Integration
This project tests whether tailored exercise programs combined with AI-driven data tools can improve care and quality of life for people with ovarian cancer.
Quick facts
| Grant type | NIH-funded research |
|---|---|
| Study type | NIH-funded research |
| Funding institution | Roswell Park Cancer Institute Corp NIH-funded |
| Lab location | 1 site (Buffalo, United States) |
| Project ID | NIH-11241943 on NIH RePORTER |
What this research studies
From a patient's perspective, the program plans to offer individualized exercise plans and track how those plans affect health, symptoms, and daily functioning. Researchers will collect information from wearable activity monitors, medical records, and patient-reported surveys and use AI to integrate these data into personalized recommendations. The work is run through a Roswell Park P50 program focused on translating these findings into clinical support. Participants may be asked to follow exercise guidance, wear devices, and share health information so the team can refine care.
Who could benefit from this research
Good fit: Ideal candidates are people diagnosed with ovarian cancer who are medically able to engage in an exercise program and willing to share activity and health data.
Not a fit: Patients who cannot safely exercise due to severe comorbidities or who cannot use or share wearable/device data may not receive benefit from this approach.
Why it matters
Potential benefit: If successful, this work could provide patients with individualized exercise guidance and AI tools that improve treatment tolerance, physical function, and quality of life.
How similar studies have performed: Exercise interventions have helped cancer patients' fitness and well-being in prior studies, while combining personalized exercise with AI integration is a newer and still-emerging approach.
Where this research is happening
Buffalo, United States
- Roswell Park Cancer Institute Corp — Buffalo, United States (Active)
Researchers
- Principal investigator: Moysich, Kirsten B. — Roswell Park Cancer Institute Corp
- Study coordinator: Moysich, Kirsten B.
About this research
- This is an active NIH-funded research project — typically early-stage science, not a clinical trial accepting patient enrollment.
- Some NIH-funded labs run parallel clinical studies or seek volunteers for related work. To check, contact the principal investigator or institution listed above.
- For full project details, budget, and progress reports, visit the official NIH RePORTER page below.