Oncoscope-AI Launches Edge for Leaders Shaping the Next Standard of Cancer Care

This press release was originally published to EINPresswire on 28 August 2025. NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, August 28, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Oncoscope-AI, a pioneer in real-time oncology evidence solutions, today announced the launch of Oncoscope Edge, a premium decision-support platform designed for oncology leaders and decision-makers who demand comprehensive, flexible, and actionable insights. In today’s fast-moving oncology landscape, specialists face an overwhelming volume of data—from thousands of new clinical trials to rapidly evolving guidelines and regulatory updates. Oncoscope Edge empowers oncologists, fellows-in-training, researchers, and educators with advanced tools to find, filter, and synthesize the evidence that matters most. “Oncoscope Edge is built for the leaders shaping the next standard of care,” said Anna Forsythe, PharmD, MBA, Founder and CEO of Oncoscope-AI. “Whether you are preparing for a congress talk, conducting a scientific project, guiding a tumor board, or training the next generation of oncologists, Edge delivers clarity from complexity—instantly.” Advanced Features of Oncoscope Edge include: With these capabilities, Oncoscope Edge goes beyond surface-level searches, available now in Oncology-AI’s Essential tool, to deliver deeper, customizable searches and user-generated reports—enabling oncology leaders to stay ahead in a field where evidence evolves daily. About Oncoscope-AI Oncoscope-AI is the first real-time oncology information platform integrating treatment data, guidelines, peer-reviewed publications, and regulatory approvals. By combining AI-powered systematic literature reviews with expert human validation, Oncoscope ensures that oncology decision-making is grounded in the most current and reliable evidence. Sign up for a free license key (verified health care professionals only) or to receive a demo.
In the AI Era, Are Doctors Still at the Cutting Edge of Medicine? Oncoscope-AI Founder Anna Forsythe Asks

This article was originally published in Success Magazine. Artificial intelligence (AI) has revolutionized industries, from finance and logistics to advertising and agriculture. It has offered new efficiencies, insights and capabilities that were seemingly unimaginable just a few decades ago. Healthcare is no exception. In oncology, especially, where the volume of emerging research and the complexity of personalized treatments are accelerating, intelligent tools have become integral. Oncoscope-AI, an advanced oncology intelligence platform, was created to respond to this need. The catalyst behind the founding of the company was a profound question: How can AI help doctors keep up with and apply the flood of cancer breakthroughs to improve real-world patient care? The company has made answering that question its mission. Refining the approach to cancer treatment Anna Forsythe, founder of Oncoscope-AI, believes the cancer landscape today is vastly different from what it was 10 years ago. This is particularly evident in breast and lung cancer, two of the most commonly diagnosed cancers worldwide. “Before, a diagnosis of breast cancer meant a standard treatment regimen for nearly all patients. Individual biological differences didn’t matter. But our understanding has evolved,” Forsythe explains. Indeed, what was called “breast cancer” is now understood as multiple subtypes. Each has its own biological behavior, prognosis and treatment response. Similarly, lung cancer has splintered into a web of genetically and immunologically distinct conditions. The era of the one-size-fits-all approach, dominated by blanket chemotherapy, surgery and radiation, is fading. A more refined model of cancer treatment has emerged in its place. Forsythe states that today’s oncology is driven by two approaches. One is immunotherapy, which amplifies the body’s immune response to fight the disease from within. The other is targeted therapy, which focuses on specific biomarkers or genetic mutations within the tumor itself. They’re usually used in tandem with the goal of turning terminal-stage cancers into manageable, chronic conditions. Consider the arrival of CDK4/6 inhibitors palbociclib, ribociclib and abemaciclib and how they changed the landscape for breast cancer treatment. According to research based on trials, CDK4/6 inhibitors are considered revolutionary in breast cancer treatment and have played a key role in slowing progression. Progression-free survival, or how long a patient can live without the cancer worsening, has become the new benchmark of success. New challenges for physicians This progress introduces a new kind of pressure, however. “With every new biomarker discovered, every new targeted therapy or immunotherapy approved, the challenge for physicians multiplies,” Forsythe states. “How can any oncologist stay up to date with thousands of new studies, frequent regulatory updates and a deluge of clinical data?” At a single oncology conference, countless new abstracts may be released in just one cancer type. The expectation is that doctors will somehow process all of this while continuing to see patients, manage treatments and fulfill legal requirements for ongoing medical education. In theory, continuous medical education (CME) should help doctors stay current. In practice, it’s difficult for health professionals to retain all the information. Enter Oncoscope-AI Oncoscope-AI has emerged to empower healthcare professionals. Forsythe, a pharmacist, health economist and former pharmaceutical executive, designed it to bridge the divide between cutting-edge research and practical clinical application. The platform scans thousands of oncology publications using proprietary AI, filters them through an evidence-based framework and presents only the most clinically actionable insights. According to Oncoscope-AI, these findings are reviewed and contextualized by a human research team before being published in the system. The impact of Oncoscope-AI is best felt in patient stories. A friend Forsythe met while traveling was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer. She had undergone traditional chemotherapy and surgery that left her physically and emotionally drained. “She was then prescribed one of the breakthrough CDK4/6 inhibitors. Her life changed. She regained energy, joy, and time,” Forsythe shares. However, when her cancer began to progress again, her oncologist defaulted to standard chemotherapy, believing there were no more options. There were. However, the doctor didn’t know. Forsythe sent her friend research summaries and articles through Oncoscope-AI, which she later shared with her doctor. She was then prescribed a new-generation therapy. “She’s thriving now,” says Forsythe. “She just returned from a trip to France and is booking another.” Aiming to help health professionals and patients thrive This story raises a question. How many more patients are out there who could live longer, better lives if only their doctors had access to the right information at the right time? “The problem is not the doctors. It’s the data overload,” Forsythe emphasizes. “The solution isn’t replacing physicians with AI, but equipping them with AI tools that distill noise into knowledge and confusion into clarity.” Oncoscope-AI is striving to do just that. It’s working to help oncologists across the globe turn the latest science into tangible outcomes for patients in the exam room, not months later when guidelines catch up. This article is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice. If you are seeking medical advice, diagnosis or treatment, please consult a medical professional or healthcare provider.
Anna Forsythe’s Second Movement: How a Pianist Became a Pioneer in Cancer Intelligence

“There are new studies released every week that could change a treatment plan,” she says. “Doctors do not need more data. They need insights they can trust, at the exact moment they need them.”
Anna Forsythe Built Oncoscope to Give Doctors What They Actually Need: Usable Intelligence

In today’s healthcare landscape, oncologists are drowning in data. Thousands of studies are published each month, new FDA approvals roll out regularly, and guidelines change constantly. Yet, despite this flood of information, many doctors still struggle to make the best treatment decisions for their patients. The problem is not a lack of data. The problem is a lack of usable insights. Nowhere is this more critical than in oncology, where every day and every decision can change the course of a patient’s life. Anna Forsythe, founder of Oncoscope-AI, an AI-powered oncology intelligence platform, has spent her career at the intersection of science, economics, and clinical practice. She believes the answer is not to add more data to the pile but to transform it into clarity. “We do not need to give physicians more to read,” Forsythe says. “We need to give them the right information, in real-time, that is relevant to the patient in front of them.” It is a reasonable expectation, but one that the current system sometimes fails to meet. Oncology guidelines can span hundreds of pages, often outdated by the time they reach clinical use. “While there have been recent attempts to address this problem with a chatbot approach, it is the human/AI combination that is key in achieving usability and physicians’ trust.” Forsythe’s platform, Oncoscope, solves this challenge by merging human expertise with trained artificial intelligence. It automatically reviews and organizes clinical trials, cross-referencing them with regulatory approvals and treatment guidelines. The result is a curated, reliable, and immediately usable knowledge base that oncologists can access in seconds. It works like this: a doctor inputs three basic clinical parameters—the stage of the disease, the genetic profile, and any prior treatments. In return, they receive a tailored, human-reviewed list of relevant studies, including survival outcomes and progression data, with immediate links to guidelines, approvals, and original publications. There is no need to scroll through irrelevant abstracts or search multiple databases. Everything is in one place, organized and actionable. This kind of tool is not just a convenience. It is a necessity. According to Forsythe, she was inspired to create Oncoscope after seeing people in her own life receive outdated or suboptimal cancer treatments. In one case, a friend with late-stage breast cancer was placed on chemotherapy despite the existence of a newer, more targeted therapy. The doctor had not yet seen the recent study supporting it. Forsythe found it in three clicks. “That story is not an exception,” she says. “It is happening every day. And it is not because doctors are careless. It is because the information is not delivered in a way they can use quickly.” This is a systemic flaw, and it has consequences. When oncologists default to older treatments because they cannot keep up with new evidence, patients can miss out on therapies that could extend or improve their lives. In a field where even a few months of added survival can mean everything, delays in information are delays in care. Forsythe and her team designed Oncoscope to cut out these delays. The system prioritizes the most rigorous research, flagged for relevance and clinical significance. Each entry is reviewed by experts to ensure it meets regulatory-grade standards. Doctors are not asked to interpret raw data—they are given the insights they need to make decisions now. Critically, Oncoscope is free for verified healthcare professionals. Forsythe calls it an altruistic venture, at least for now. Her goal is simple—to give doctors a tool they can trust and patients the care they deserve. “If we want better outcomes in cancer care,” she says, “we do not need more information. We need smarter information. That is what changes lives.” Beka Vinogradov is the Digital Communications Lead for Oncoscope-AI. She holds a Master’s in Health Administration and has extensive experience and education in business, marketing, and design.
Oncoscope Officially Launches, Ushering in a New Era of Real-Time Oncology Intelligence

Oncoscope officially launches, offering real-time, powered by AI, oncology insights to doctors. Free for verified clinicians, it helps improve cancer treatment decisions in just three clicks. Oncoscope-AI, a revolutionary oncology intelligence platform, has officially launched following a successful beta phase and over a year of strategic development that involved extensive conversations with practicing oncologists. The platform, which delivers real-time, human-curated cancer insights enhanced by artificial intelligence, is now live and available free of charge to verified healthcare professionals worldwide. Founded by Anna Forsythe, a pharmacist, health economist, and seasoned pharmaceutical executive, Oncoscope addresses a critical gap in oncology care. It gives clinicians instant access to the most current treatment data, FDA approvals, and guideline-aligned information, consolidated into one user-friendly platform. “Doctors do not need more data. They need the right information, at the right time, in a format they can use to make better decisions for their patients,” said Forsythe. “Oncoscope provides that clarity. It is a living library of oncology, curated by experts and built to save lives.” Unlike generic AI tools or static databases, Oncoscope uses trained AI to scan thousands of oncology publications and filters them through a rigorous, evidence-based framework. Each entry is cross-referenced with clinical guidelines and regulatory approvals to ensure usability and relevance. All of the results are carefully scrutinized by a team of experienced researchers. Currently, the platform supports breast and lung cancer, with prostate, bladder, colon, and rectal modules rolling out in the coming months. The process is intuitive. Physicians answer three clinical questions—cancer stage, genetic markers, and prior treatments—and receive a personalized, actionable summary. Each recommended article includes survival data, progression insights, treatment efficacy, and toxicity, extracted across 32 key clinical parameters. “The result is something physicians can actually use in the moment,” said Forsythe. “It takes three clicks to go from a patient in the room to the most up-to-date evidence in the field.” Access to Oncoscope is free for verified healthcare professionals, including physicians, nurses, pharmacists, genetic counselors, and physician assistants. Non-verified users, such as those in finance or consulting, can purchase limited access at a monthly rate, restricted to a single cancer type. This structure reflects the company’s commitment to empowering front-line clinicians with better tools—without barriers. Forsythe, who previously founded and sold a successful health economics company serving global pharmaceutical clients, brings a rare combination of clinical, technical, and business expertise to this venture. She sees Oncoscope not only as a tool, but as a mission. “This platform was born from both professional insight and personal urgency,” she said. “Too many patients are still receiving outdated treatments, simply because their doctors do not have time to stay current. I realized I had the knowledge, the team, and the experience to fix that.” With a lean team, strategic vision, and a rapidly growing user base, Oncoscope is poised to become a trusted global resource in cancer treatment.“We are not just a tech company,” said Forsythe. “We are part of the oncology ecosystem. And we are here to help doctors deliver the best care possible.” Beka Vinogradov is the Digital Communications Lead for Oncoscope-AI. She holds a Master’s in Health Administration and has extensive experience and education in business, marketing, and design.