A breakthrough moment for healthcare in Egypt— the very first fully Egyptian artificial intelligence (AI) system in the Middle East, designed to detect breast cancer early. The launch took place at Baheya Hospital in Sheikh Zayed, with Dr. Amr Talaat, the Minister of Communications and Information Technology, attending the event.

Built Entirely in Egypt
What makes this project special isn’t just the technology — it’s the fact that it was built entirely by Egyptian engineers and data scientists, trained on Egyptian medical data, and developed in collaboration between the Ministry’s Applied Innovation Center and the Baheya Foundation.
Why This Matters for Women’s Health
Early detection is everything when it comes to breast cancer. Catching it early means higher recovery rates, lower treatment costs, and better outcomes for thousands of women.
With this new system, doctors now have an AI-powered tool that can analyze mammogram images and provide accurate preliminary diagnoses — with about 90% accuracy.
In short: it’s faster, smarter, and tailored for the local community.
Behind the Scenes Collaboration
Behind the scenes, the project is a true blend of disciplines — radiologists, oncologists, software engineers, and data scientists all came together to make it happen.

What the AI Can Actually Do
Here’s what the system can do:
- Analyze mammogram images in seconds
- Detect abnormal growths that might otherwise be missed
- Classify them as benign or malignant
- Learn and get more accurate over time

Powered by a Massive Egyptian Database
One of the most impressive features is the Egyptian-built mammogram database. It includes more than 60,000 images, carefully categorized by type, location, density, and diagnostic confidence.
This means the AI isn’t just smart — it’s culturally and medically relevant, because it was trained with data from Egyptian patients, making it more accurate than imported systems.
Where It’s Already Being Used
The system has been fully integrated into Baheya’s hospitals in Haram and Sheikh Zayed this month. It’s now part of the hospital’s daily operations, working alongside doctors to support more efficient and reliable screenings.
Looking Ahead
This launch isn’t the end — it’s just the beginning. The Ministry has plans to:
- Refine the AI engine even further
- Expand its use to more hospitals nationwide
- Increase the number of women who benefit from early detection
Final Thoughts
This project is about more than technology — it’s about hope, access, and making healthcare smarter and more inclusive.
By building its own AI system, Egypt isn’t just catching up with global trends; it’s setting one for the region. And if this is just the “first building block,” as Dr. Talaat called it, then the future of AI in Egyptian healthcare looks very promising.
WE ALSO SAID: Don’t Miss…Egypt’s Breast Cancer Initiative: A Platform Built On Motivation & Encouragement