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Medical artificial intelligence takes a step forward: Microsoft announces ultra-precise AI for complex cases

Microsoft has just unveiled an artificial intelligence system that outperforms humans in complex medical diagnostic cases. According to a comparative study conducted on thousands of clinical scenarios, this AI is up to four times more accurate than general practitioners in certain rare or difficult-to-diagnose situations1.

This system is based on the advanced multimodal models developed by Microsoft Research, combining textual analysis, visual analysis (radiology), and patient history. Unlike tools such as GPT-4 or Med-PaLM, Microsoft’s AI has been specifically trained on clinical corpora, real-world cases, and data from hospital partnerships.

The model has been trained on a massive volume of medical data, including millions of imaging reports, pathology reports, hospital records, and patient-physician communications. Thanks to the integration of different types of data (multimodality), the AI is able to:

According to Microsoft, in 84% of the complex cases tested, the system provided the correct diagnosis on the first attempt, compared with 21% for a panel of experienced doctors.2.

Microsoft’s AI is currently being tested in partnership with several hospitals in Europe and the United States, in medical specialties where diagnostic errors remain high or treatment times are critical. Specific applications include

With the advent of this new generation of medical AI, the doctor’s role is not disappearing, but undergoing a profound transformation. AI acts as a diagnostic co-pilot, capable of narrowing down possibilities, flagging inconsistencies, or suggesting more precise courses of action.

Physicians remain the only ones capable of interpreting the human context, making the final clinical judgment, and interacting with the patient. But their role is becoming more strategic: validating algorithmic recommendations, explaining diagnoses, and resolving uncertainties or conflicts between AI and clinical intuition.

The growing power of these tools is driving a transformation in medical curricula and practices. Among the new skills expected:

According to the WHO, 72% of hospitals in G20 countries plan to integrate one or more AI modules over the next five years3.

This performance should not obscure the ethical challenges. Microsoft assures that its system has been designed to comply with current regulatory frameworks, including the GDPR and future European AI Act standards. The AI records every stage of its reasoning, provides justifications for its decisions, and allows users to trace the source of recommendations.

Safeguards have been built in to prevent abuse:

This approach underscores the fact that the challenge of the future lies not so much in raw precision as in the mutual trust between professionals and intelligent systems.

The promise of this AI is not to replace doctors, but to provide them with a high-performance tool to better treat the most complex cases. In the face of staff shortages, overcrowded emergency departments, and increasingly complex diagnoses, AI can serve as a means of improving efficiency and safety.

But this promise will only become a reality if it is accompanied by training, transparency, and regulation. AI alone cannot fix the healthcare system—but when properly integrated, it can become the driving force behind faster, fairer, and more humane healthcare.

1. Microsoft Research. (2025). Advancing AI-Assisted Medical Diagnostics.
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/ai-in-diagnosis

2. Stanford HAI. (2025). Benchmarking AI and Clinicians on Complex Diagnostic Cases.
http://www.hai.stanford.edu/research/reports/diagnostic-ai-study

3. World Health Organization. (2024). AI and the Future of Health Systems.
http://www.who.int/publications/i/item/ai-healthcare-2024

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