Continental Hospitals Launches Next-Generation AI-Enabled Biobank to Advance Global Biomedical Research
VMPL
Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], November 10: The Continental Next-Generation Biobank was inaugurated at Continental Hospitals, Gachibowli, Hyderabad on November 10th, 2025. The Biobank is designed to accelerate AI-powered biomedical discovery and therapeutic development globally.
The initiative combines advanced biobanking infrastructure with intelligent data systems, with initial biotech collaborations underway and broader programs to be announced in 2026. Developed in collaboration with Chronicle Bio and its CEO Rohit Gupta--who previously built and ran Stanford's biobank--the platform will enable deeper understanding of disease biology to drive earlier diagnoses, more effective treatments, and lasting benefits for patients and humanity.
"Through partnerships with leading U.S. and global academic institutions, and AI research platforms, the biobank will become a bridge between India's clinical excellence and worldwide scientific innovation and aims to transform how biological data is collected and used--empowering patients to contribute to research that may improve outcomes for others while positioning Continental Hospitals at the forefront of a new, patient-centered era in biomedical discovery," highlighted Dr Reddy.
Chronicle Bio US Co-Founder & Continental Hospitals Director Mr Rishi Reddy explained that due to the enormous amount of information contained in the samples, biobanks are an important reserve in development and validation of new diagnostic markers and new therapeutic agents. In cancer research, biobanks are a key resource for genomic-, proteomic, and metabolomic-based research, molecular epidemiology and translational studies, molecular diagnostic and therapy, development of therapeutic targets, and biomarker and drug discovery.
"By integrating these samples with AI-driven analytics, the biobank will help accelerate discovery in areas such as oncology, immunology, cardiovascular disease, neurology, and rare disorders. This infrastructure not only supports pharmaceutical and biotech research but also enables new diagnostic tools and personalized treatment strategies that can directly benefit patients through earlier detection and more effective interventions s," added Mr Reddy.
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