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Digital twins in healthcare:

How virtual patient models are revolutionizing custom software development

Introduction

The notion of digital twins has spread throughout industry after industry, changing how organizations use data to make decisions. In healthcare, digital twins have the potential to revolutionize clinical practices by representing patients’ biologies in a virtual realm. These virtual models enable clinicians to understand and simulate health states more accurately.
Fundamentally, a digital twin is a dynamic digital representation of an individual item in the physical world – in this case, the patient. Combining data from various sources, such as medical records and meta-data from wearable devices, clinical notes, and real-time remote monitoring, creates a digital representation of a patient’s state at any given time. Digital twins are particularly applicable to healthcare due to the need for personalized treatment and early prediction. By leveraging digital twins, healthcare professionals can gain new insights into patient behaviors, the evolution of diseases, and their responses to treatment.
This article explains why digital twin technology is set to revolutionize how organizations develop custom software for the global healthcare industry. These digital models will improve personalized treatment plans, enhance predictive analytics, and optimize training simulations, leading to better outcomes for patients and lower costs for hospitals. With digital twins, the future looks bright for healthcare companies that want to remain at the cutting edge of innovation and patient care.

Understanding digital twins

Digital twins are high-fidelity digital simulations of real things that use real-time data to simulate, process, and make predictions. For health, a digital twin is a patient simulation, enabling health providers to keep track of their condition in real-time. Through the ongoing integration of information from various platforms, including EHRs, wearables and other health monitoring devices, digital twins capture a patient’s entire state, which helps clinicians make more accurate clinical decisions and prescribe treatments that match individual needs.
For healthcare, there are several kinds of digital twins whose uses differ. Patient models replicate each patient so treatment plans can be designed to fit their distinct health conditions. Organ models model a certain organ or system of the body, attempting to mimic its working under different circumstances—especially useful for surgical planning or diagnosing disease. Population health models also aggregate data across cohorts of patients so that healthcare providers can identify patterns, manage resources, and use them for public health actions.
Digital twin technology is built on IoT (Internet of Things), AI (Artificial Intelligence), and data analytics. IoT devices acquire tons of real-time patient data via wearables and medical equipment, and AI algorithms interpret that data to provide insights and predictions. Analytics helps translate that data into meaningful knowledge. Together, these technologies create a compelling model for creating digital twins and using them to help improve patients’ care and healthcare operations.

Applications of digital twins in healthcare

The most potent application is as a foundation for customized treatment plans calibrated explicitly to an individual and their health status. Instead of testing potential treatments in the real world, which would entail repeated invasive intervention on or in the patient’s body, doctors could experiment with different interventions on the virtual twin and see the result. This has obvious potential for reducing trial and error for ‘n of 1’ treatments, dramatically improving outcomes. As an immediate use case, consider how digital twins could help cancer doctors predict how a patient will respond to various chemotherapy regimens, allowing them to personalize treatments in a way that could maximize therapeutic effects.
Another advantage of digital twins in healthcare is the potential for predictive analytics. Digital patient models can help physicians forecast future health outcomes based on current and prior data. For chronic disease management, for example, a digital twin of the patient can serve as an early warning system for the progression of the disease or complications. Predictions based on predictive models are expected to enable healthcare providers to intervene and avert disaster. It could help prevent costly hospital stays.
Moreover, the digital twin can simulate a medical procedure as part of training or preparation. It can thus represent a medical student or other professional undergoing a complex technique as a surgeon. In this scenario, the surgeon or technician can practice the procedure with a virtual counterpart of the patient before performing it in real life, helping to trial and refine techniques and anticipate the outcome. Doing so could boost confidence and allow for better planning and preparation, thus providing a more precise intervention and leading to better patient outcomes. Students likewise use this sort of simulation with the digital twin. Thus, Medical students and professionals could use the digital twin to trial real-world scenarios and practice techniques, improving their skills in a safe, low-risk environment.

Benefits of digital twins for custom software development

Digital twins begin with a source of data that can come from anywhere, including electronic health records (EHRs), wearable devices, imaging tools, and more. This data gets pulled from diverse sources and organized into a single system. This massive influx of data allows custom software developers to build a much richer model of a patient’s health, and a healthcare software developer is empowered to make better decisions with all of the available, up-to-date information. Digital twins increase the intelligence of the end system. Digitally twinned healthcare software can create a powerful, real-time, self-updating model. Instead of looking at past occurrences and independent dependencies that affect patients at any given time, custom software developers can build software that can use dynamic data to monitor patient vitals and act accordingly.
Another benefit is the precision in patient simulations. Digital twins create virtual triplicates of patients in a minute and detailed representation, which is useful when healthcare providers predict what type of treatment responds ideally to an individual. Healthcare software with better technological support, like digital twins, will model different responses to treatment with greater reliability, which will optimize the quality of patient outcomes. The precision in modeling augments the human ability to prognosticate with higher certainty and is thus better for making treatment decisions.
At last, digital twins enable a constant cycle of learning in health software by creating feedback that continually improves software algorithms or treatment strategies in the real world. As information is fed back into the system, the digital twin strengthens itself and, with more real-world results, increases its predictive power. Evolving with every interaction, digital twins allow custom health software or devices to learn and continuously improve the ability to anticipate and address changing medical knowledge or patient data. With ongoing feedback loops, healthcare providers will always have the latest tools and software for better patient care, and software developers will, too, continuously be improving their software via machine learning and enhanced algorithmic capabilities for greater precision and effectiveness.

Challenges in implementing digital twins in healthcare

Privacy and security is one of the primary concerns when implementing digital twins for healthcare. For precise digital replicas, digital twins must draw upon a tremendous amount of patient data. These include medical records, wearable health and genetic data, which are all very private. It is imperative to keep this information safe from breaches, unauthorized access, and misuse. Physicians and developers will need to ensure that there is strong HIPAA and GDPR compliance, as well as strong encryption and security measures in place to protect patient data on digital twin platforms.
Interoperability is another big challenge. For digital twins to be effective, they need to seamlessly bridge a range of legacy health technologies such as electronic health records (EHRs), diagnostic instruments, and wearables. But many healthcare providers still rely on legacy infrastructure that might not easily interface with recent digital twin systems. Overcoming this barrier will take significant technical work and partnership between developers of software and clinicians to develop standard protocols, APIs, and architectures that enable digital twins to talk to different systems and flow data efficiently.
Lastly, the financial and resource requirements of using digital twins in healthcare can be prohibitive for many institutions. It is not just expensive to build, implement and support digital twin technologies, it requires technical knowledge about the related fields such as data analytics, AI, and IoT. Smaller healthcare organizations might find it challenging to finance upfront costs, and even bigger systems should be thoughtful about the expenses they are likely to face over time. Also, digital twins entail advanced infrastructure like fast networks and cloud storage that could be costly and logistically expensive to deploy in mass.

The future of digital twins in healthcare

The prospects of digital twins for healthcare remain inextricably tied to trends and technologies that will enhance the power and reach of the twins. For instance, advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning will allow digital twins to process data faster and more accurately; this will, in turn, lead to more efficient real-time decision-making in the face of huge amounts of patient-specific information. Similarly, the scaling up 5G networks is expected to provide a high-speed, low-latency network platform for future health utilities, such as remote/virtually assisted surgeries or continuous monitoring of patients with chronic diseases. As the technological sophistication of IoT devices and wearables increases to access intricate health status data from the human body, the twin’s ability to track the health of its host will become more sophisticated.
Applications on the horizon include chronic disease management and preventive care. Virtual patients could trace the progression of chronic diseases such as diabetes or heart disease in real patients and help clinicians proactively manage care and prevent complications. In preventive care, digital twin technology could serve an important role in identifying early warning signs of disease, making it possible to intervene before conditions become more serious or life-threatening. Digital twins could become a must-have tool in acute care, ongoing patient management, and health maintenance.
As digital twins start to take off, custom software development needs to evolve to support and scale them in the most helpful and optimized way. Product engineering adapted to the individual needs of the healthcare providers would be required to allow digital twins to fit naturally into the existing systems and to enable the seamless flow of data across the boundaries of healthcare IT landscapes. Custom solutions also offer the flexibility necessary to adjust a digital twin model to the needs of individual medical specialties, from cardiology to oncology. With software tailored to the development of digital twins and designed to grow with this technology, the companies that develop the software will be ready to support and empower healthcare organizations in adopting digital twins, with patient health as the ultimate target.

Conclusion

To summarize, digital twins can help revolutionize healthcare by offering virtual patient models; these enhance patient-specific treatments, predictive analytics, medical simulations, and more, which lead to the evolution and advancement of custom software development, data integration, patient outcomes, and continual learning. Though data privacy, interoperability, and cost are obstacles to overcome, the future of digital twins, including those to benefit healthcare, is evolving rapidly, with endless possibilities, especially in chronic disease, prevention, and more. As this shift in how we think about healthcare evolves, with a target on data and patients, healthcare software developers will be an integral part of this shift toward better, more efficient, and personalized health.