AI-powered brain health project gets $30m boost
Australian Epilepsy Project
Key Facts:· The Australian Epilepsy Project (AEP) has been awarded $30 million to embed to its leading brain health platform into the Australian health system.
· The Federal Government’s ongoing financial support will allow the AEP to give more clinicians and hospitals access to its advanced diagnostics and expertise.
· The funding will also support the development of future solutions for other neurological and mental health conditions.
Australians living with epilepsy and other neurological and mental health conditions will benefit from faster diagnosis and treatment, after the Federal Government committed an additional $30 million to support the expansion of a leading brain health research project.
The Australian Epilepsy Project AEP, a flagship research initiative of The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health (The Florey), was established in 2021 with an initial $30 million in funding from the MRFF - the single largest government investment into epilepsy research in Australia.
Using artificial intelligence, the AEP has created an innovative platform that brings together advanced MRI scans, genetic analysis and cognitive testing to offer patients a new and improved standard of care for epilepsy in Australia.
The additional $30 million in MRFF funding over the next four years will enable AEP to:
- Scale its reach across the health system to establish it as the leading standard of care for epilepsy across Australia;
- Investigate solutions for brain disorders beyond epilepsy to benefit the millions of Australians living with neurological and mental health conditions; and
- Develop its technical capability and products in readiness for commercialisation and international market expansion to benefit the Australian economy.
Chief Investigator at the AEP and Clinical Director at The Florey, Professor Graeme Jackson, said: “It is clear that we are entering a new era where technology is impacting our lives in unprecedented ways. This is the case in medicine as in other areas.
“Digital technologies and AI can translate research into new optimised models of healthcare at population scale. This brings the highest standard of care to the whole population regardless of where you live with, particular impact for rural and regional Australia. This is the future.
“The Australian Epilepsy Project has successfully established a high standard of care for epilepsy, bringing advanced research to clinical impact in a platform model that connects patients with their doctors and ongoing research. Success will require new approaches to brain health and new thinking about the barriers to innovation that move beyond old assumptions.
“The Australian Epilepsy Project will continue to be at the forefront of developing the Australian med-tech industry in alignment with the ‘Ambitious Australia’ strategic plan.”
AEP’s executive leader, Anton De Weger, thanked the Federal Government for recognising the significant impact of the project.
“Securing this four-year investment allows us to move from a frontier clinical project to an established translation platform,” Mr De Weger said.
“Scaling AI-enabled digital care pathways requires a multidisciplinary team spanning deep neurological science, startup and commercial acumen, clinical expertise, lived experience, data science and engineering.
“This grant provides the precise runway needed to build innovative, regulated, automated tools that scale impact and change the standard of care for brain health, proving Australia can lead the world in health-tech commercialisation."
The Hon Mark Butler MP, Minister for Health and Aged Care, who last year hailed the AEP as “exemplar” of what the MRFF can achieve, said: “The medical advances we make in this country through health and medical research are always about improving the lives of Australians, as well as people around the world.
“Our investments will support our health and medical research sector by making funding more stable, boosting job security, and fostering a world-class research culture.”
Since its development, AEP has connected more than 2,100 patients with more than 160 neurologists across all mainland states.
About us:
The Australian Epilepsy Project's world-leading AI-enabled digital health platform that is transforming the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy in Australia, with the potential to extend to other neurological and mental health conditions.
The platform gives patients across Australia access to advanced diagnostic testing, combining MRI imaging, genetic analysis and cognitive assessment. Using AWS cloud technology, AI and automation, the platform analyses test data alongside each patient's medical history to deliver an integrated findings report directly to the referring neurologist — driving meaningful changes to patient care in both the short- and long-term.
Built to operate at population scale, the AEP platform breaks down the geographic barriers that have long defined access to specialist care. Expertise that was once available only at major metropolitan tertiary hospitals can now be delivered to clinicians — and their patients — anywhere in Australia, including regional and remote communities.
The Australian Epilepsy Project is a flagship research initiative of The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health.
The Florey is an independent medical research institute devoted to tackling brain and mental health conditions. Our mission is to improve lives through research. We envisage a world where early detection and timely intervention mean these conditions are preventable or treatable, so that we can all live full and healthy lives.
We have more than 50 teams investigating our research priorities: Dementia, Neurodegeneration and Immunology, Stroke and Critical Care, Epilepsy and Neurodevelopment, and Mental Health.
Find out more about the AEP: www.epilepsyproject.org.au
Find out more about The Florey: www.florey.edu.au
Contact details:
Georgia Brown, Head of Communications & Engagement - [email protected] | 0431113346