Digital Surgery Lab

Digital Surgery Lab (DSL)

The Digital Surgery Laboratory at the Champalimaud Foundation is an innovative unit that combines technology and medicine to help improve surgical practice. With a multidisciplinary team of healthcare professionals, researchers, and engineers, the laboratory develops solutions based on artificial intelligence and augmented reality. The goal is to enhance surgical precision, personalize treatments, and improve technological literacy in healthcare. Collaboration among specialists allows for the creation of new approaches in digital surgery. This cutting-edge environment drives innovation and the clinical application of emerging technologies. Our main research areas include:

• Developing AI algorithms to aid screening, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up

Our research focuses on leveraging machine learning and deep learning techniques applied to medical imaging and electronic health records. These AI-driven tools are designed to assist healthcare professionals in enhancing the accuracy and efficiency of screening and diagnosis, selecting the most appropriate treatments, predicting treatment response, and personalizing follow-up plans based on each patient’s characteristics and clinical journey.
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• Enhancing the generalizability and robustness of AI algorithms to accelerate clinical adoption

Our technical studies investigate innovative strategies inspired by biological vision and causal methods to improve the generalizability and robustness of AI models. These methods are essential for ensuring the safe and reliable deployment of AI technologies across diverse healthcare settings and patient populations, supporting their widespread adoption in clinical practice.
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• Advancing medical data visualization through immersive and interactive solutions

We are developing cutting-edge visualization techniques to enable real-time, intuitive access to both imaging and non-imaging health data throughout the patient journey. Our work involves creating immersive 3D digital twins of patients, which offer enhanced depth perception and improved spatial understanding of anatomical structures. We are also exploring the use of Generative AI to improve access to clinical information for healthcare professionals and patients. These tools aim to support surgical planning, clinical decision-making, and patient education by making complex data more accessible and actionable.
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Our Clinical studies examine the potential of physical exercise as a concurrent therapy along with standard care to counteract the overall side effect burden of breast cancer treatment resulting from fatigue, cardiotoxicity, neuropathies, and sleep disturbances. Examples of our clinical research include a 4 to 6 month randomized controlled trial that is examining the impact of supervised exercise on Ki67 among breast cancer patients undergoing neoadjuvant treatment (The Neoadjuvant Exercise Oncology Program – NEO -Program). We have other clinical trials in preparation to 1) examine whether resistance exercise can improve tolerability to cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i) with endocrine therapy in estrogen receptor-positive (ER+)/Human Epidermal Receptor 2-negative (HER2-) breast cancers and 2) to determine whether physical exercise can improve sleep patterns during adjuvant hormone therapy in hormone-dependent (HR+) breast cancer.

Epidemiological studies use already existent data resources to expand our understanding of the role of physical activity and sleep in the etiology of cancer. Epidemiological studies are important to determine the distribution of risk factors for cancer such as physical inactivity or poor sleep in the population and quantify dose-response relationships between physical activity, sleep, and cancer risk and cancer survivorship. Examples of ongoing studies include our 1) examinations of the distribution of activity levels in the Portuguese population (n=8000 adults) using wearable measures of step counts and stepping intensity, and 2) examinations of associations between wearable-based sleep patterns and risk of mortality among adults (n=5000 adults).

Digital Health studies in our lab are examining the clinical value of wearable technology in oncology for the timely identification and monitorization of cancer treatment side effects including fatigue. These studies will allow for more individualized and proactive cancer treatments. We are particularly interested in identifying digital biomarkers of cancer outcomes using physical activity, exposure to light, and sleep measures, extracted from consumer and research-grade wearables. One example of a digital health study that we conducted recently includes the characterization of sleep patterns using a contactless sleep device among 25 women undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy and whose sleep patterns were monitored for 4 consecutive months throughout the entire duration of their treatment.

Group Leader
Co-PI
Group Leader
Co-PI
Group Leader
Chief Medical Officer
Breast Surgeon

Meet Our Team

Computer Vision Developer
Software Developer
MSc Student
Clinical Research Assistant
MSc Student
MSc Student
Research Technician
MSc Student

Selected Publications

Automatic and high-resolution surface scan system for breast cancer treatment: clinical accuracy and usability assessment
Rafaela Timóteo, Alexandre Laborde, Yasna Forghani, João Santinha, Daniel Simões Lopes, Pedro Gouveia, Tiago Marques. European Journal of Surgical Oncology.  doi: 10.1016/j.ejso.2026.111507
Publication Date: 2026
AI-based planning for DIEAP flap procedures: exploring foundation models for artery perforators analysis
Matilde Andrade, Nuno Loução, David Pinto, Tiago Marques, Ricardo Vigário, Pedro Gouveia, João Santinha, Front. Med.  2026 13:1757637. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2026.1757637.
Publication Date: 2026
Comparative analysis of nnU-Net and Auto3Dseg for fat and fibroglandular tissue segmentation in MRI. 
Forghani Y, Timóteo R, Marques T, Loução N, Cardoso MJ, Cardoso F, Figueiredo M, Gouveia P, Santinha J. J Med Imaging (Bellingham). 2025 Mar;12(2):024005. doi: 10.1117/1.JMI.12.2.024005.
Publication Date: 2025
Bias in artificial intelligence for medical imaging: fundamentals, detection, avoidance, mitigation, challenges, ethics, and prospects.
Koçak B, Ponsiglione A, Stanzione A, Bluethgen C, Santinha J, Ugga L, Huisman M, Klontzas ME, Cannella R, Cuocolo R. Diagnostic and interventional radiology. 2025 Mar 3;31(2):75. doi: 10.1186/s13244-024-01833-2.
Publication Date: 2025
ESR Essentials: radiomics—practice recommendations by the European Society of Medical Imaging Informatics..
Santinha J, Pinto dos Santos D, Laqua F, Visser JJ, Groot Lipman KB, Dietzel M, Klontzas ME, Cuocolo R, Gitto S, Akinci D’Antonoli T. European Radiology. 2024 Oct 25:1-1. doi: 10.1007/s00330-024-11093-9.
Publication Date: 2024
BREAST+: An augmented reality interface that speeds up perforator marking for DIEAP flap reconstruction surgery.
Timóteo R, Pinto D, Matono P, Mavioso C, Cardoso MJ, Gouveia P, Marques T, Simões Lopes D. Health Technol Lett. 2024 Dec 10;11(6):301-306. doi: 10.1049/htl2.12095.

Publication Date: 2024
Augmented Reality in Breast Surgery Education.
Gouveia PF, Luna R, Fontes F, Pinto D, Mavioso C, Anacleto J, Timóteo R, Santinha J, Marques T, Cardoso F, Cardoso MJ. Breast Care (Basel). 2023 Jun;18(3):182-186. doi: 10.1159/000529587.

Publication Date: 2023

Selected Projects

METABREAST
Sponsor: IAPMEI Agendas Mobilizadoras

Principal Investigator: Pedro Gouveia

METABREAST is a multidisciplinary clinical research project led by the Champalimaud Foundation, exploring how augmented reality (AR), artificial intelligence (AI), and computer vision can enhance breast cancer surgery. The project integrates 3D imaging, MRI data, and real-time intraoperative visualization to create a digital twin of the patient’s anatomy, enabling surgeons to precisely locate tumors and preserve healthy tissue. METABREAST aims to reduce unnecessary mastectomies and reoperations by improving surgical accuracy through digital overlays viewed via AR headsets. The system is currently being developed and validated through clinical trials, and it includes the creation of immersive surgical environments. This project will provide critical insights into the feasibility and clinical impact of intelligent AR systems in cancer surgery.
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Impact of Physical Exercise on Wearable-based Measures of Sleep and Exposure to Light at Night among Adults Undergoing Active Treatment for Breast Cancer
Sponsor: Liga Portuguesa Contra o Cancro
Principal Investigator: Pedro Saint-Maurice

This is a 12-week randomized controlled trial of supervised exercise and sleep in adjuvant hormone therapy in hormone-dependent (HR+) breast cancer. This project will determine whether combined exercise (aerobic and resistance training) can improve sleep duration, quality, and sleep timing in breast cancer patients. The project will also examine whether exercise can impact wearable-based metrics related to exposure to artificial light. The potential of exercise to improve sleep has major implications for cancer patients on hormone therapy that often experience disrupted sleep and exacerbated treatment-related adverse effects.
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RELIEVE – Tailored Exercise Program after a Cancer Diagnosis
Sponsor: The Good Bottle
Principal Investigator: Carla Malveiro / Leonor Matos / Pedro Saint-Maurice

RELIEVE is in the design stage and will be a prospective cohort of cancer patients being followed at the Champalimaud Foundation and that have been referred to a structured and supervised exercise program at our clinic. Patients enrolled in RELIEVE will complete behavioral and clinical assessments at baseline and follow an exercise program using Technogym latest technology, where the prescription and execution of exercises is assisted by artificial intelligence. RELIEVE will allow that we improve our scientific understanding of the impact of exercise on cancer treatment outcomes.
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HEKA 4.0

Revolutionizing Breast Cancer Surgery

Breast 4.0 is a project from the Digital Surgery Lab, which uses novel, non-invasive and 100% digital technology to guide breast-cancer surgery. This technology is integrating advanced computer vision with clinical imaging data, allowing for live, digital, augmented reality-guided, high-precision surgery for breast cancer.

This project led to the establishment of a consortium that brings together the Champalimaud Foundation and several Portuguese companies, funded by the Portuguese Plano de Resiliência e Recuperação to improve, through digital technologies, breast cancer treatment and clinical outcomes.

Read more about this project here.

Disclaimer: contact us for more information about these studies or if you wish to know more about other ongoing work we have at our lab.

HEKA 4.0

Revolutionizing Breast Cancer Surgery

Breast 4.0 is a project from the Digital Surgery Lab, which uses novel, non-invasive and 100% digital technology to guide breast-cancer surgery. This technology is integrating advanced computer vision with clinical imaging data, allowing for live, digital, augmented reality-guided, high-precision surgery for breast cancer.

This project led to the establishment of a consortium that brings together the Champalimaud Foundation and several Portuguese companies, funded by the Portuguese Plano de Resiliência e Recuperação to improve, through digital technologies, breast cancer treatment and clinical outcomes.

Read more about this project here.