News | FDA | May 07, 2026

With clearances in both prostate and breast cancer, Artera continues to expand its platform across additional oncology indications. 

breast cancer, AI, oncology, digital pathology

May 6, 2026  Artera, the developer of multimodal artificial intelligence (MMAI)-based prognostic and predictive cancer tests, has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for its ArteraAI Breast for use in patients with early-stage, hormone receptor-positive (HR+), HER2-negative invasive breast cancer. 

ArteraAI Breast is the first and only FDA-cleared digital pathology-based risk stratification tool for breast cancer. With clearances in both prostate and breast cancer, Artera continues to expand its platform across additional oncology indications. 

These FDA milestones come alongside recent CE Marking for both the ArteraAI Prostate Biopsy Assay and the ArteraAI Breast Cancer Assay, underscoring the company’s expanding regulatory footprint in the U.S. and Europe.

“FDA clearance for ArteraAI Breast represents a significant expansion of our FDA-cleared AI platform in oncology,” said Andre Esteva, CEO and co-founder of Artera. “This milestone reflects the growing role of our technology across multiple cancer types. Breast cancer care is highly nuanced, with treatment decisions that depend on individualized risk. Our goal remains consistent across prostate and breast cancer, and beyond: to help clinicians translate complex data into more precise, personalized treatment decisions across the cancer journey.”

ArteraAI Breast generates an AI-derived risk score that provides prognostic information on the likelihood of distant metastasis in patients with early-stage HR+/HER2- breast cancer. Using digitized histopathology images and patient clinical variables, the model stratifies patients into low- and high-risk groups based on a predefined risk score cutoff. 

In early-stage HR+/HER2- breast cancer, determining the appropriate intensity of therapy can be complex due to variability in clinical and pathological factors. By providing consistent, pathology-based risk stratification at the point of diagnosis, ArteraAI Breast is designed to support clinicians in contextualizing risk within established clinical decision-making frameworks.

Data presented at the 2025 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS) evaluated the model in early-stage breast cancer and demonstrated the potential to inform chemotherapy benefit in certain patient populations.

“This clearance represents an important advance on the road to personalizing treatments for patients with early-stage breast cancer,” said Eric Winer, MD, medical oncologist and director of the Yale Cancer Center. “Using AI and digital pathology has the potential to streamline operational workflows, while creating a strong interdisciplinary linkage between oncology and pathology. This approach may further improve the clinicians' ability to help patients make the best treatment decisions.”

ArteraAI Breast is designed to integrate directly into standard pathology workflows using routine surgical resection samples, without requiring additional tissue or separate specimen collection. This approach allows the software to provide same-day results, enabling pathology labs to provide clinicians with patient-specific prognostic risk information alongside standard histopathology reports. 

To learn more, visit artera.ai


Related Content

News | Women's Health

June 2, 2026 — Results of an American College of Radiology-managed retrospective study involving 110,000 women presented ...

Time June 02, 2026
arrow
News | PET Imaging

May 29, 2026 — GE HealthCare recently announced that its MIM KineticID modeling software1 is now 510(k) pending with the ...

Time May 29, 2026
arrow
News | Radiopharmaceuticals and Tracers

May 27, 2026 — Subtle Medical has received FDA clearance for its SubtleHD (PET), the company's next-generation AI ...

Time May 27, 2026
arrow
News | FDA

May 19, 2026 — DeepHealth has received the CE Mark for the Brain Health and Brain Age solutions within its Neuro Suite ...

Time May 26, 2026
arrow
News | Cardiac Imaging

May 21, 2026 — A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic’s ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News | X-Ray

May 21, 2026 — RADIN Health and AZmed have announced the expansion of their strategic partnership and enhance radiology ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News

May 21, 2026 – Artera, the developer of multimodal artificial intelligence (MMAI)-based prognostic and predictive cancer ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

May 7, 2026 — Roche has entered into a definitive merger agreement to acquire PathAI, a U.S.-based company in digital ...

Time May 21, 2026
arrow
News | Computed Tomography (CT)

May 12, 2026 – Bracco Imaging S.p.A. has purchased a mobile photon-counting CT scanner from MARS Bioimaging to support ...

Time May 20, 2026
arrow
Feature | Enterprise Imaging | Kyle Hardner

For radiology departments, the imbalance between surging imaging volume and a shortage of trained radiologists is taking ...

Time May 20, 2026
arrow
Subscribe Now