New Global Ovarian Cancer Research Consortium Joins Forces with Microsoft's AI For Good Lab To Launch First-Of-Its-Kind $1M+ Global Grant To Improve Survival Rates
Four leading ovarian cancer research charities from four countries are funding a new AI Accelerator Grant in partnership with Microsoft's AI for Good Lab to supercharge the next cancer research breakthrough
TORONTO, May 8, 2025 /CNW/ - Today marks World Ovarian Cancer Day and the launch of the Global Ovarian Cancer Research Consortium — a first-of-its-kind alliance uniting four leading ovarian cancer research organizations across the United States, Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
Together, the Consortium is announcing its inaugural initiative: a game-changing $1 million grant, with an additional $1 million in compute support from Microsoft's AI for Good Lab, to address the global challenge in ovarian cancer survival rates. Globally, 324,000 women are diagnosed with ovarian cancer and 207,000 women die from the disease each year. The Consortium's groundbreaking AI Accelerator Grant is a bold new effort that will ignite a wave of innovation in AI-powered ovarian cancer research — bringing hope, and potentially life-saving breakthroughs, to women around the world.
The Consortium, formed in 2024, brings together leading ovarian cancer organizations from the United States, Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. Their mission: to combine forces, resources, and determination to accelerate progress where it's desperately needed. Now, with the support of Microsoft's technology and expertise, the Consortium is poised to rewrite the future of ovarian cancer care.
Progress in ovarian cancer research is lagging dangerously behind other diseases. It's predicted that by 2050 the number of women around the world diagnosed with ovarian cancer will rise over 55% to 503,448 and the number of women dying from ovarian cancer is projected to increase to 350,956 each year.
"The complexity of ovarian cancer, with its vague symptoms and many types, makes it difficult to diagnose early and treat at advanced stages. Yet these are accomplishments we know we need to save lives. This is why the $1 million collaborative investment in AI-powered ovarian cancer research is critically needed," shares Tania Vrionis, CEO of Ovarian Cancer Canada. "Through this AI Accelerator Grant, we can harness AI to understand ovarian cancer and its impact on women faster than ever. Our global philanthropic partnership, support from Microsoft's AI for Good Lab, and international research collaboration are key to accelerating change. After decades without real progress, women facing ovarian cancer deserve breakthroughs as quickly as we can make them."
AI is already revolutionizing cancer diagnoses—from breast to brain, skin to thyroid—with stunning advances. But ovarian cancer has yet to feel the full power of this transformation. That changes now.
With this urgent call to action, the Consortium is summoning the world's brightest minds to harness AI and tip the scales toward survival.
"When I heard my treatment options, I was not happy. To treat my cancer, they had to remove my uterus, my ovaries, and I knew I could no longer have a child on my own. But I also knew that I wanted to live so I had no choice," shares Julia, a 38-year-old Canadian woman diagnosed with advanced low-grade serous ovarian cancer, a rare form of the disease. Despite undergoing life-altering treatment options when diagnosed with advanced ovarian cancer, women still face a high chance of their cancer returning, just as Julia's did in 2023. To improve their treatment options and disease outcomes, innovative research is urgently required. "We need to make ovarian cancer a top priority. It doesn't have the same visibility and awareness that other cancers have but women like me have limited options when facing the disease," adds Julia. "The truth is that change will only happen if research funding increases in a significant way. Ovarian Cancer Canada has helped me a lot through my journey. They support me, share information, and most importantly, with research investments like this, they gave me what I was missing most - hope."
Researchers will be asked to form teams that will include a representative from each of the four countries to compete for the new grant. The successful grant will support any area of research that will improve survival rates. It must have a multi-jurisdictional team from across the grant-funded countries and a multidisciplinary team, including an AI expert. To learn more about the grant, visit https://ocrahope.org/research/information-for-researchers/grant-programs/
Microsoft is generously partnering on this grant to donate up to $1m of in-kind Azure compute credits to the successful project through Microsoft's AI for Good Lab-partnership with OCRA. Microsoft's cloud computing power will enable the successful applicants to accelerate progress against ovarian cancer.
"New discoveries are needed to find lifesaving treatments for ovarian cancer, a cancer that tragically still has a low survival rate. Equipping leading researchers around the globe with powerful AI tools and computing resources will help accelerate their critical work, hopefully leading to breakthroughs that save women's lives. Microsoft's AI for Good Lab is proud to support ovarian cancer research through this grant." said Juan Lavista Ferres, Microsoft Chief Data Scientist and Director of Microsoft's AI for Good Lab.
ABOUT OVARIAN CANCER CANADAWe are the only national health charity in Canada focused on uncovering key discoveries that can change the reality of an ovarian cancer diagnosis. We are building research capacity, unlocking insights into rarer forms of the disease, addressing urgent needs, and bringing hope to people across the country. After decades without real change, improved outcomes are finally possible.
The 3,000 Canadians diagnosed with ovarian cancer every year deserve our attention . They deserve our focus on demanding action, delivering change, and transforming their lives. We will not rest until women are able to live freely, fully, and uninhibited by ovarian cancer. Towards this goal, we are relentless. Learn more at ovariancanada.org.
SOURCE Ovarian Cancer Canada
View original content to download multimedia: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/May2025/08/c4537.html
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Microsoft Commits $400 Million to Expand Swiss AI and Cloud Infrastructure
Microsoft (MSFT, Financials) announced a $400 million investment to expand its artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure in Switzerland. The company said the funding will support data center upgrades near Zurich and Geneva, helping meet rising demand for AI services across regulated industries such as healthcare, finance, and government. Microsoft noted that over 50,000 existing customers will benefit from the expansion, which also aims to support new organizations while ensuring data remains within Swiss borders. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 4 Warning Sign with MSFT. According to Microsoft, local demand for Azure OpenAI services has surged since mid-2023, and Switzerland now ranks second globally in GitHub AI contributor share. The company said 31% of Microsoft users in Switzerland engaged with AI tools in the past six months, a three-percentage-point increase, highlighting growing adoption across the region. UBS, one of the world's largest banks, is among the institutions relying on Microsoft's locally compliant infrastructure. Microsoft said the investment extends its long-standing commitment to Switzerland's digital future, which includes launching local data centers in 2019 and opening the Microsoft Innovation Hub in 2022. The initiative is also part of Microsoft's broader European Digital Commitments, focused on supporting open source, cybersecurity, digital resilience, and AI governance. The company said it will deepen partnerships with Switzerland Innovation Parks to accelerate the commercialization of AI research and industrial applications. Since 2019, Microsoft has provided more than CHF 30 million in technology resources to over 1,500 startups through its Swiss AI Tech Accelerator and other programs, helping generate over 11,000 jobs. The next cohort for the AI accelerator is scheduled for fall 2025. As part of its national AI skilling initiative, Microsoft said it plans to train one million people in Switzerland by 2027. The effort will target students, educators, industry workers, and nonprofit organizations, and will be conducted in collaboration with institutions such as FH Schweiz and organizations like Innovate Switzerland and the CyberPeace Institute. Microsoft also plans to support global AI policy and governance efforts through its partnerships in International Geneva, working with the United Nations and other multilateral organizations to promote responsible AI and deliver training and humanitarian solutions. The company is involved in AI-related programs with agencies such as UNHCR, IOM, OHCHR, and IFRC, and is contributing to cybersecurity and AI governance initiatives with the CyberPeace Institute and the International Telecommunication Union. In terms of sustainability, Microsoft said its Swiss operations are fully powered by renewable energy. The company also signed a six-year, 27,600-ton biogenic carbon removal and storage agreement with Swiss firm Neustark, covering projects in Switzerland and Germany. Microsoft said these efforts align with its global goal of becoming carbon negative, water positive, and zero waste by 2030. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.


TechCrunch
22 minutes ago
- TechCrunch
TC Sessions: AI Trivia challenge for tickets ends tonight
Tonight's your last shot: Take on the TechCrunch Sessions: AI Trivia Countdown and walk away with two tickets for just $200. The window closes tonight at midnight — go! Think you know AI? Can you name the company that created the AI assistant known as Siri before Apple acquired it? Or the name of Google's large language model family released in 2023? If so, now's your time to shine. Ready to compete? Prove your AI smarts and win your spot at TC Sessions: AI Tackle a short round of AI trivia before tonight ends, and you could earn a special offer — check your inbox if you win. How to play Step 1: Take today's AI Trivia Countdown quiz. Step 2: Check your inbox to see if you've scored the special code. Step 3: Use the code to grab 2-for-1 tickets to TechCrunch Sessions: AI. Join the future of AI at TC Sessions: AI — tomorrow at UC Berkeley's Zellerbach Hall. Play the trivia. Score the deal.


American Military News
25 minutes ago
- American Military News
LinkedIn cuts 281 workers in California as tech layoffs continue
LinkedIn, the professional social network where people search for work, is shedding jobs. The Microsoft-owned tech company has cut 281 workers in California, a notice filed this week to the California Employment Development Department shows. Earlier this month, Microsoft said that it was terminating 3% of staff, or about 6,000 workers. The layoffs affected its California employees and LinkedIn workers. LinkedIn is among major tech companies that have slashed its workforce this year. Meta, Google, Autodesk and other tech companies have also been cutting workers, citing various reasons, including restructuring, investments in artificial intelligence and low worker performance. LinkedIn, headquartered in Sunnyvale and Mountain View, notified its employees about the layoffs on May 13. Workers posted about their pink slips on the social network, letting hiring managers and recruiters know that they were open to work. The company didn't respond to a request for comment. Its website says it has roughly 18,400 employees and offices in more than 30 cities globally. LinkedIn's California layoffs affected workers at its offices in San Francisco, Mountain View, Carpinteria and Sunnyvale. More than half of those cuts hit its workforce in Mountain View. Software engineers were heavily impacted by LinkedIn's California layoffs, according to data provided to the state. Talent account directors, senior product managers and other workers also lost their jobs. The cuts come as tech companies are releasing more artificial intelligence-powered tools that can generate code. Executives have also said that would impact engineering jobs. Microsoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella said in April that as much as 30% of the company's code is written by AI during a conversation with Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg at the social network's AI developer conference. As Microsoft competes to release more AI tools, the company has said that it's trying to increase how fast it moves by reducing the number of managers and cutting down on redundancies. It's the latest cost-cutting round at LinkedIn. In 2023, the company laid off nearly 700 employees and said that it was trying to improve agility and accountability as part of a reorganization effort. Microsoft purchased LinkedIn for $26 billion in 2016. In April, the company reported that its revenue in the third fiscal year quarter reached $4.3 billion in the third fiscal year quarter, up 7% over last year. ___ © 2025 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.