06/21/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/21/2026 15:23
Contact:
Link to video and sound (details below): https://spaces.hightail.com/receive/g0qdh1cxnj
***SUGGESTED VOSOT SCRIPT BELOW***
HONOLULU - Researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center and UH Mānoa John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) were awarded more than $12 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish the Pacific Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Medicine (PAC-AID)-a new research center dedicated to accelerating biomedical discoveries through artificial intelligence and data science to benefit people in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific region, and worldwide.
Funded through the NIH's Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) program, the five-year award will provide approximately $12 million through February 2031. The award was administered by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, with a federal award date of June 4, 2026.
The center will be led by Principal Investigators John Shepherd and Youping Deng. Shepherd is chief scientific officer at the UH Cancer Center, and B.H. and Alice C. Beams Endowed Professor in Cancer Research at JABSOM. Deng is co-director, Genomics and Bioinformatics Shared Resource, at the UH Cancer Center; and professor and director, Bioinformatics Core Facility, at JABSOM.
PAC-AID will serve as a central hub integrating AI into biomedical research to improve health outcomes in Hawaiʻi. Over five years, the project will renovate the UH Cancer Center Data Center to establish a new Medical AI Core (MedAI Core), providing advanced, high-performance computing resources and AI expertise. Physically located within both the UH Cancer Center and JABSOM on the shared Kakaʻako campus, PAC-AID will directly fund four major inaugural research projects and establish a Pilot Projects Program to support more than 8 new, locally relevant pilot studies.
"At the heart of our mission as a flagship research university is the drive to translate innovation into meaningful impact," said Vassilis Syrmos, incoming chancellor of UH Mānoa. "PAC-AID is a vital expansion of that mission, enabling our faculty to harness the power of artificial intelligence to pioneer new avenues of biomedical inquiry that were previously unreachable, solidifying the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa's role as a global leader in health innovation."
"AI has the potential to unlock major medical breakthroughs and help people live healthier lives, and we need to take advantage of it," said U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz, who played a pivotal role in securing the grant. "This new funding will help Hawai'i continue to attract top-tier talent and develop treatments and cures that will benefit people across the state."
"The $12 million over five years will substantially strengthen AI and data science capabilities and support the development of the next generation of investigators," said UH Cancer Center Director Naoto T. Ueno. "The research advances made possible by PAC-AID will further the UH Cancer Center's work toward new understandings and treatments for cancer, to save lives in Hawai'i and the Pacific, and across the globe. In addition, high paying jobs generated by this project will have a strong economic benefit for our local communities."
"At JABSOM, our mission is to improve the health of Hawaiʻi through education and research," said Sam Shomaker, JABSOM dean. "This investment will help accelerate discoveries that address the real health challenges facing our communities and ensure that advances in AI translate into better outcomes for patients."
Enabling workforce development
Shepherd and Deng will oversee efforts to build research capacity, as well as foster the next generation of independent investigators using artificial intelligence and advanced data science approaches to address critical medical and public health challenges. Beyond funding research, this award establishes a workforce development mechanism to support the next generation of faculty investigators.
"This COBRE award provides the critical infrastructure to bridge advanced AI computational methods with our specific clinical and community health challenges," Shepherd said. "By fostering a collaborative environment for our investigators, we are equipping them with the technical capabilities to tackle the most persistent health disparities in our islands and turn complex data into actionable health solutions."
"By the end of this project, we expect to have a nationally competitive Medical AI Core, four independently funded research leaders, and more than 10 pilot projects," said Deng. "Through these efforts, alongside workshops and collaborative research opportunities, we will significantly strengthen Hawaiʻi's capacity for AI-enabled biomedical research and innovation to address important health challenges in our region and beyond."
Transforming medical research with AI
Artificial intelligence is increasingly transforming healthcare and biomedical research by helping scientists analyze large and complex datasets, identify patterns that may otherwise go undetected, and accelerate the development of new approaches to disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.
Shepherd, who leads the Hawaiʻi and Pacific Islands Mammography Registry, is using a massive breast imaging database to develop AI biomarkers that predict cancer risk specifically for Asian and Pacific Islander populations.
The new PAC-AID will support similar faculty-led research projects, provide funding for pilot studies, and establish shared research resources that can be used by investigators across disciplines.
Initial funded projects include AI-driven research by UH Cancer Center researchers Kevin Cassel (using full-body imaging to triage skin lesions) and Elizabeth Nakasone (studying pancreatic cancer in Native Hawaiian and Japanese populations); UH Mānoa public health researcher Jonathan Huang (modeling environmental toxicant effects on fetal development); and JABSOM researcher Yiqiang Zhang (identifying genetic traits in congenital heart disease).
COBRE Phase 1 grants focus on the development of independent biomedical researchers and research centers, and are designed to have a 15-year cycle.
"PAC-AID is specifically designed to develop six to eight early-stage faculty members at the University of Hawaiʻi and across Pacific Island institutions who will use artificial intelligence and data science to address cancer and chronic disease outcomes in one of the nation's most medically underserved and understudied regions," Shepherd said.
He added that the expected impact to Hawaiʻi is substantial. "Our benchmark for success is that the funded faculty projects, 4 initially and 2-4 more when those graduate in year 3, and will later achieve independent NIH R01 (Research 01 level university) funding at an estimated $3.25 million per award. That represents a projected $19.5 million in additional federal research funding returned to the State of Hawaiʻi (6 funded R01s) on top of the initial $12 million COBRE award itself - a combined potential economic and research impact of more than $31 million for Hawaiʻi's research and healthcare workforce. These estimates are for the first 5-year period."
PAC-AID joins a growing portfolio of NIH-funded Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence at UH Mānoa, including the Diabetes Research Center, Integrative Center for Precision Nutrition and Human Health and the Integrative Center for Environmental Microbiomes and Human Health.
About The University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center
The University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center is dedicated to saving lives in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific. It is inspiring hope by working to conquer cancer. The flagship priority is to understand and address cancer health disparities. The center strives to achieve this through research, education, patient care, and community outreach, focusing on the unique and diverse ethnic, cultural, and environmental characteristics of Hawaiʻi and the Pacific.
The UH Cancer Center is one of only 74 institutions designated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), representing a significant mark of excellence, and is the only NCI-designated cancer center in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific. The center contributes more than $57 million to Hawai'i's economy through scientific research, clinical trials, and other activities.
As part of the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, the UH Cancer Center operates out of facilities located in Kakaʻako. The center directly employs more than 300 faculty and staff, with an additional 200 affiliate members and cooperative agreements with organizations that are part of the Hawaiʻi Cancer Consortium. The consortium includes The Queen's Health Systems, Hawaiʻi Pacific Health, Kuakini Medical Center, Adventist Health Castle, Hilo Benioff Medical Center, Hawaiʻi Medical Service Association (HMSA), and the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM), all working together with the UH Cancer Center to advance cancer research and treatment in the state.
Learn more at UHCancerCenter.orgConnect with us | Facebook | Instagram | X | LinkedIn
About the John A. Burns School of Medicine
Established in 1965, the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) is one of the degree-granting schools of the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Named in honor of the visionary former governor, JABSOM trains the next generation of outstanding physicians, scientists, medical technologists, and speech pathologists to improve the health and wellness of our communities throughout Hawaiʻi and the Pacific. Our impactful research focuses on understanding and addressing health disparities, particularly in Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and Filipinos. JABSOM is home to the first clinical department in an accredited medical school in the nation that is focused on health disparities of an Indigenous population, Native Hawaiians.
###
Link to video and sound (details below): https://spaces.hightail.com/receive/g0qdh1cxnj
VIDEO:
BROLL: (1 minute, 52 seconds)
0:00-0:57 - UH Cancer Center
0:57-1:52 - JABSOM
SOUNDBITES:
John Shepherd, Chief Scientific Officer, UH Cancer Center
(0:13)
"I'm excited about it because I feel that artificial intelligence is changing everything. It changes everything about the way that we operate and especially our research."
(0:15)
"That involves training faculty to use artificial intelligence in research and building up resources so that all the faculty at UH can incorporate artificial intelligence methods into what they do."
Youping Deng, Professor/Director, Bioinformatics Core Facility, JABSOM
(0:21)
"We are creating a good pipeline for preparing a new generation of biomedical scientists or new resources, new projects, new investigators, who can leverage AI technology to conduct biomedical research."
______
VOSOT SCRIPT
INTRO:
Backed by a 12-million-dollar National Institutes of Health grant, the University of Hawaiʻi is launching a new hub called the Pacific Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Medicine to transform medical research.
VO:
A major goal of the new center is workforce development-training local scientists to tackle specific health challenges in the islands.
This includes using AI to help doctors triage skin lesions and to study pancreatic cancer in Native Hawaiians.
SOT:
John Shepherd, Chief Scientific Officer, UH Cancer Center
"I'm excited about it because I feel that artificial intelligence is changing everything. It changes everything about the way that we operate and especially our research."
Youping Deng, Professor and Director, Bioinformatics Core Facility, JABSOM
"We are creating a good pipeline for preparing a new generation of biomedical scientists or new resources, new projects, new investigators, who can leverage AI technology to conduct biomedical research."
VO:
The center is funded through early 2031, with the ultimate goal of improving health outcomes across Hawaiʻi and the Pacific region.