Marco Advisor generates diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic recommendations for Colorectal Cancer directly from clinical records in the hospital information system. The system integrates biomarkers such as RAS, BRAF and MSI with NCCN/ESMO guidelines to deliver structured, auditable recommendations to the treating team.
Some answers to questions we often receive
Marco Advisor connects to existing HIS/EMR systems via standard APIs (HL7 FHIR), requiring no data migration. It reads structured fields from Colorectal Cancer patient records and returns recommendations directly in the usual clinical interface, minimizing workflow disruption.
Yes. Marco Advisor's evidence engine updates continuously with NCCN/ESMO guidelines and relevant clinical trials for Colorectal Cancer. Recommendation changes are reflected automatically without manual updates by the clinical team.
Yes. Marco Advisor automatically cross-references clinical records with current Colorectal Cancer guidelines and identifies opportunities such as indicated but unrequested molecular testing (RAS, BRAF and MSI), therapy line changes per progression criteria, or available clinical trial eligibility, generating alerts to the treating team.
Marco Advisor generates three recommendation categories: diagnostic (alerts on pending testing such as RAS, BRAF and MSI), prognostic (risk stratification by stage and molecular factors) and therapeutic (treatment recommendations aligned with NCCN/ESMO guidelines, interaction alerts and contraindications).
Marco Advisor processes data within the hospital environment (on-premise or private cloud), without transmitting identifiable information to external servers. The system complies with health data protection regulations (HIPAA, GDPR and local norms) with full audit trails of access and data use.
Marco Advisor implementation is modular: it can start with the oncology service or Colorectal Cancer tumor board and scale gradually. The Marco team supports implementation with HIS connector configuration, local clinical validation and team training, with continuous post-implementation support.
Hospitals miss biologic therapy opportunities in CRC because the cross-referencing of molecular profile with therapeutic guidelines does not happen systematically.