
27-year-old woman says ChatGPT helped detect cancer one year before doctors
In an incident that shows how AI tools are increasingly intersecting with healthcare, a young woman from Paris has claimed that ChatGPT flagged her blood cancer symptoms nearly a year before doctors delivered the same diagnosis. Here is what happened.Marly Garnreiter, 27, had been experiencing persistent night sweats and skin irritation but believed these were stress-related reactions following the death of her father due to colon cancer. Medical checkups at the time didn't point to any serious health concern, with test results coming back normal.advertisementStill searching for answers, she decided to describe her symptoms to ChatGPT. The AI chatbot responded by suggesting she might be showing signs of blood cancer — a warning she initially brushed off. The woman told People.com website that she didn't take the AI chatbot seriously and that her friends also told her not to rely on a machine for medical advice.
Several months later, Garnreiter began to feel exhausted more often and noticed pain in her chest. A second round of medical consultations finally led to a scan, which revealed a large mass in her left lung. Doctors diagnosed her with Hodgkin lymphoma, a rare form of blood cancer that affects the white blood cells.Now preparing for chemotherapy, Garnreiter says she never imagined an AI tool would identify something so critical before medical systems caught on. It was shocking for her to believe. "I just didn't want my family to go through this all over again,' she said.advertisementThough rare, Hodgkin lymphoma has a relatively high recovery rate when diagnosed early. According to health experts, the five-year survival rate is over 80 per cent. Typical symptoms include fatigue, abdominal discomfort, itchy skin, night sweats, and fever — many of which Garnreiter experienced.As she moves ahead with treatment, she hopes her story encourages people to trust their instincts and not hesitate to seek further opinions when something feels wrong. "It's really important to listen to our bodies,' she said. 'Sometimes we tend to lose our connection with our inner self."While ChatGPT is not a replacement for medical advice, Garnreiter's experience adds to the growing conversation about how AI may play a role in early symptom recognition — especially in cases where conventional diagnosis takes time.

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