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Care Systems
Clinical risk is fundamentally time-sensitive.
Patients are not exposed to a single, static risk; they move through time-dependent risk states across their cancer journey. These include diagnostic delay, disease progression, treatment windows closing, cumulative toxicity, and the balance between recovery and recurrence. Care pathways must therefore be responsive to timely requirements.
The key tenet of Care Systems is rooted in this clinical reality. It takes the time–risk relationship as its organising principle, structuring care around how risk evolves as patients move through diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up.
Our approach reflects how this architecture is applied in practice:

Time–risk as the organising axis

Structured reporting designed for clinical reasoning
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MDTs treated as the unit of clinical intelligence
Adaptive care pathways evolve with risk

Learning embedded within everyday care
Care Systems support the interpretation of multiple forms of clinical information, such as radiology, pathology, genomics, and clinical feedback, so that evolving clinical risk can be assessed in context and over time. This fosters actionable decision support focused on clinical relevance and patient preferences across the patient’s care journey.
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