Health NZ to invest $4.4M in AI solutions for breast screening
1 hour ago
NEWS - eHealthNews editor Rebecca McBeth 
Health New Zealand | Te Whatu Ora has released a tender worth $4.4 million over three years covering AI reading for screening mammograms and breast density reporting.
The organisation expects AI reading to improve cancer detection rates whilst reducing recall rates and interval cancer rates. Also, to deliver economic benefits by releasing senior radiologist capacity to reinvest in breast health services.
The Request for Proposal is for AI mammography solutions for BreastScreen Aotearoa, and solutions must integrate into the national breast screening programme’s existing blind double-read screening workflow.
BreastScreen Aotearoa screens around 270,000 women annually, with numbers expected to increase as age extension rolls out to include women up to 74 years old.
The roll-out will be via three-phases, beginning with validation in July 2026. Phase one includes retrospective trials comparing AI reading performance against historical ground truth, including datasets using Māori, Pacific and Asian ethnicity mammograms, followed by prospective trials comparing AI performance against radiologist reading.
Phase two is implementation, including integrating AI solutions into existing breast screening workflows and technical platforms before deploying into production. The final phase covers post-implementation delivery across eight lead providers.
Solutions must work with all BreastScreen Aotearoa mammogram machine types and integrate with both Sectra PACS and Intelerad systems used across the programme.
Data sovereignty requirements mean that patient health information must remain within New Zealand or Australia jurisdictions and all AI models must be locked, so they cannot learn from production data, with any updates requiring customer approval before release.
The deadline for proposals is 22 June 2026.
This RFP follows the release of an RFI in February this year.
Health Minister Simeon Brown said at that time that the, "work is focused on future-proofing breast screening so services remain accessible, patient-centred, and responsive to the needs of women.
“AI is already being used internationally to assist with medical imaging. Exploring how it could complement the work of radiologists in New Zealand is an important step toward strengthening early detection and ensuring the long-term sustainability of screening services,” he said.
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