What happened?

When Data Starts to Speak – Reflections on the BZKF AI & Bioinformatics Retreat in Speinshart

“If you’ve ever wondered what can truly be done with real-world healthcare data – this retreat offered a compelling answer.”

(Prof. Dr. med. Alexander Hann)

For five days, the Speinshart Scientific Center for AI and SuperTech became a hub for a unique constellation of minds: clinical experts, AI researchers, data scientists, and early-career investigators from all six Bavarian university hospitals came together under the BZKF Lighthouse “AI & Bioinformatics.” Enabled through the collaboration of “BAIOSPHERE X Speinshart”, the goal was clear: to turn existing data into tangible progress for cancer care.

A Shared Data Foundation, A Shared Mission

At the heart of the retreat was a dataset rarely seen at this scale: harmonized real-world data from over 300,000 cancer patients across Bavaria – decades of clinical practice integrated across institutions.

The question was no longer whether insights could be generated, but how quickly and how deeply.

A central focus was the development of AI-based trajectory models – approaches that capture the temporal sequence of diagnostics, treatments, and outcomes. The aim is to identify common treatment pathways, detect deviations, and understand how these influence patient outcomes.

The concrete use case: younger prostate cancer patients with aggressive Gleason scores. A subgroup where individual centers often lack sufficient case numbers – but where pooled data enables statistically robust and clinically meaningful analyses.

From Prostate Cancer to Palliative Care: Interdisciplinarity in Action

What truly set the retreat apart was the breadth of clinical questions addressed. Work spanned across:

  • Prostate cancer
  • Acute myeloid leukemia (AML)
  • Colorectal cancer
  • Palliative care

This diversity brought multiple perspectives to the table – and that was precisely the strength of the format. Clinical reality met methodological innovation. Questions from everyday care were translated directly into modeling strategies.

A second dataset, comprising around 3,000 colorectal cancer patients with detailed histopathological annotations, opened further avenues for cutting-edge AI applications in classification, grading, and outcome prediction. Particularly exciting was the vision of combining histopathological data with granular clinical trajectories – laying the groundwork for scalable precision oncology.

An Intensive Format: Working, Not Just Talking

This was deliberately designed as a working retreat. And it delivered exactly that.

Following a joint kick-off with dataset presentations and clinical insights, participants moved quickly into focused breakout sessions. Small, dedicated groups worked in parallel on:

  • Data extraction and harmonization
  • Model development and architecture
  • Concrete analytical pipelines

Regular cross-group sessions ensured that synergies were identified and leveraged. Ideas were not just discussed, but were tested, refined, and sometimes discarded in real time.

The overarching goal: to push promising analyses far enough to form the basis of high-impact publications.

Beyond Results: Building a Functional Network

Beyond the scientific progress, one thing became especially clear: collaboration across institutions and disciplines works and it is essential.

Different perspectives, one shared goal: improving patient care through the intelligent use of real-world data.

The BZKF is demonstrating what modern oncology research can look like: networked, data-driven, and deeply patient-centered.

Conclusion

The retreat in Speinshart was not a typical workshop, but a productive prototype for the future of cancer research in Bavaria!

If you wanted to understand the true potential of real-world data, all you had to do during those five days was step into any room – somewhere, people were actively turning data into better medicine.

And this is only the beginning.

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The author

Dr Adrian Rossner, born in 1991, is a historian and Anglicist with a special focus on structural change and industrialisation. After studying English and History at the University of Bayreuth, he completed his PhD at the Franconian Regional History Research Institute, focusing on economic and social developments in the Münchberg region during the peak of industrialisation.

Following several years as a research associate in teacher education and historical research, he took on the role of Project Coordinator for the Scientific Centre at Speinshart Monastery in 2023. Since November 2024, he has been the CEO of Speinshart Scientific Center for AI and SuperTech, where he is leading the development and strategic direction of this unique research institution in Germany.

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