Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

YuviTal wins Roche-backed breast cancer innovation challenge

The Israeli digital health startup will pilot an AI-driven platform at Sheba Medical Center to provide personalized guidance and identify concerns.

Breast Cancer
The YuviTal team celebrating its win at the “Roche for a Better Future 2025” Breast Cancer Innovation Challenge Final Event in Tel Aviv on Nov. 28, 2025. Source: YuviTal/LinkedIn.

YuviTal, a digital health startup, has won a breast cancer innovation challenge sponsored by Roche Israel, Startup Nation Central and Sheba Medical Center, the organizations announced on Monday.

The company will receive a 50,000 shekel grant (approximately $13,700) and funding up to 200,000 shekels to conduct a clinical pilot at Sheba’s Breast Cancer Institute in Ramat Gan. YuviTal will also receive an annual membership at ARC, Sheba’s innovation arm, plus mentorship from Roche experts and Sheba oncologists.

YuviTal’s platform collects real-world health data from breast cancer patients, including dietary patterns, activity levels and mood indicators. The system uses AI to provide personalized guidance and alerts clinical teams to potential concerns.

The program, part of Roche’s “Roche for a Better Future” initiative, sought digital solutions to improve treatment adherence and quality of life for breast cancer patients. An advisory committee of oncology experts selected YuviTal from the finalists.

Previous challenge winners include ophthalmology-focused companies Notal Vision and AEYE Health.

Roche Israel General Manager Avi Danziger said the program aims to accelerate digital health innovations that address complex medical challenges.

See more from JNS Staff
Israeli airstrikes destroyed a launcher after projectiles were fired at troops, and forces also struck a suspicious vehicle in the area, the IDF said.
A pioneering project sends desalinated water into a once-dry Galilee wadi, offering a glimpse of how Israel turned chronic scarcity into abundance.
“Without me, there would be no Israel,” U.S. President Donald Trump said at the G7 summit in France.
“It is a big problem if she is making these kinds of statements while officially representing the E.U. on the world stage,” said one E.U. diplomat.
The U.S. president told reporters that he intends to read his agreement with the Iranian regime “word by word” publicly to set the record straight.
“When you have something saying you can’t go to someone who uses divination, or a witch, or consults spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer, that means this is something people were doing,” Eddy Portnoy, the curator, told JNS.