AI Cuts Diagnosis Time by 50% in Goa, Says Qure.ai's Ankit Modi

At the India AI Impact Summit 2026, Qure.ai's Ankit Modi detailed how AI is transforming healthcare, citing a project in Goa that reduced lung cancer diagnosis time by 50%. The technology was also deployed at the Mahakumbh to screen for tuberculosis in crowded conditions. Alongside healthcare innovation, experts like Abilash Soundararajan emphasized India's leadership in creating frameworks for responsible AI adoption. The summit, inaugurated by PM Modi, hosts global leaders and aims to position India as a key player in shaping the ethical future of AI.

Key Points: AI Reduces Diagnosis Time 50% in India, Experts Reveal

  • AI used in TB screening at Mahakumbh
  • AI reads chest X-rays for early disease signs
  • India hosts first Global South AI summit
  • Framework for responsible AI launched
  • AI skills critical for future employability
4 min read

"Diagnosis time reduced by 50%": Qure.ai founding member Ankit Modi on AI's healthcare impact in India

At India AI Summit, Qure.ai's Ankit Modi reveals AI slashed lung cancer diagnosis time by 50% in Goa, highlighting India's global AI leadership.

"diagnosis time can be reduced by 50 per cent in Goa and it can be scaled across public health systems - Ankit Modi"

New Delhi, February 16

Highlighting India's leadership in medical innovation and technological governance, industry experts at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 underscored the transformative role of Artificial Intelligence in public health and responsible data frameworks.

Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of the summit on Monday, Ankit Modi, Founding Member and Chief Product Officer of Qure.ai, shared the global impact of AI in medical imaging across 100 countries.

"We build AI solutions for medical imaging, impacting oncology, cardiology, tuberculosis and multiple disease areas. We are at this summit to showcase our impact that we have created for 40 million people across 100 plus countries," Modi stated.

Detailing the practical application of these technologies in India, Modi cited successful interventions at large-scale gatherings and state-level screenings.

"We use AI to read chest X-rays and make an AI intervention at the right time. For example, we deployed AI at Mahakumbh last year; we saw that in a very small area, a lot of people have been crowded up, X-rays were being taken, but 3 per cent of those X-rays also had signs of tuberculosis," he noted.

He further added, "Similarly, in Goa, we did a population-level health screening with AI for lung cancer. Having an AI that can look for early signs of lung cancer in them, we showed that diagnosis time can be reduced by 50 per cent in Goa and it can be scaled across public health systems across the country."

Expressing pride in India's role as a global host, Modi emphasised the long-term inspiration for the youth.

"Personally, it fills me with immense pride that India is hosting delegates and leaders of AI from around the world today. I definitely see them getting inspired and creating more such companies, more impact for India using AI over the next 5 to 10 years," he said.

Alongside healthcare innovation, the summit also addressed the critical need for ethical guardrails and responsible AI adoption.

Speaking on the sidelines, Abilash Soundararajan, Founder and CEO of PrivaSapien, highlighted India's proactive stance on building frameworks for responsible AI.

"Given that India is taking a lead in responsible AI, there needs to be a technological framework which has to be in place. PM Modi's Office, the PSA, Principal Scientific Adviser's Office has come up with a framework called technological framework for India to make use of responsible AI," Soundararajan explained.

He noted that India is helping set a global benchmark.

"While Europe and US is not focussing on responsible AI critically, India is giving a path for the world to define how should organisations use AI responsibly. How it boils down from regulation to technology which can be implemented by enterprises is what government is looking at," he added.

Addressing the shift in the job market, Soundararajan compared the AI transition to the advent of the internet.

"After this Gen AI launch, the skills needed for people to be employable is going to be very different. How can you govern a model? How can you approve a model? How can you use data in a model? All these are going to be verticals of critical importance for employability; if you build your skills in this direction, I think opportunities are a lot," he said.

With India hosting the summit at Bharat Mandapam, PM Narendra Modi on Monday welcomed world leaders, industry experts, and dignitaries.

In a post on X, the Prime Minister highlighted the summit's theme, "Sarvajana Hitaya, Sarvajana Sukhaya," meaning welfare for all and happiness for all, reflecting India's commitment to harnessing AI for human-centric progress.

PM Modi is set to inaugurate the India AI Impact Expo 2026 at the venue this evening.

An unprecedented roster of Presidents, Prime Ministers, Crown Princes, and leading global technology voices are participating in the event, which marks the first global AI gathering to be hosted in the Global South.

The summit will see participation from leaders across 20 countries, including French President Emmanuel Macron, Brazilian President Lula da Silva, and Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will also attend.

Running till February 20, the Impact Summit showcases New Delhi's ambition to shape an AI future that is inclusive, responsible, and impactful, anchored in PM Narendra Modi's broader vision for sovereign AI.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see Indian startups leading the way. But I hope this tech reaches the primary health centres in my district soon. Often, these innovations are showcased but implementation at the grassroots is slow.
A
Abhishek O
Hosting a global AI summit is a proud moment. The focus on 'responsible AI' is crucial. We must ensure data privacy and avoid bias in these medical algorithms. The framework mentioned is a step in the right direction.
S
Sarah B
The point about new skills for employability is spot on. As a tech professional in Bangalore, the shift is real. We need more government-industry partnerships for upskilling in AI governance and model approval.
K
Karthik V
Using AI at the Kumbh Mela is brilliant! Tackling public health in dense gatherings is a huge challenge. If we can screen for TB there, we can do it anywhere. Jai Hind!
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Michael C
Impressive impact across 100 countries. It shows Indian innovation isn't just for India, it's for the world. The Goa lung cancer screening project should be a blueprint for other states.
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Neha E
While the tech is promising, we must remember it's an aid, not a replacement for doctors. The human touch in medicine is irreplaceable. AI should empower

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