By Sachin Mohan · AIM Media House
On January 29, 2026, Oracle announced the launch of Oracle Life Sciences AI Data Platform, a generative AI solution that unifies fragmented datasets and deploys what Oracle calls "agentic reasoning" to accelerate research workflows and regulatory submissions.
Their main goal is to change how pharmaceutical companies, medical device manufacturers, and research organizations conduct drug development, clinical trials, and safety monitoring.
Since inception, pharmaceutical research has been constrained by siloed datasets spread across multiple systems, clinical trials in one place, supply chain data in another, safety monitoring somewhere else.
Researchers manually extract data, move it between systems, and attempt to synthesize insights across fragmented sources. Oracle's platform aims to change that. The platform's foundation is both data and infrastructure.
Oracle has embedded 129 million de-identified longitudinal electronic health records from Oracle Health Real-World Data, a massive baseline of patient-level information spanning diagnoses, treatments, outcomes, and safety signals.
That data is combined with customer data and third-party sources, all unified within Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and integrated with the broader Oracle ecosystem, including Fusion Cloud for supply chain and sales operations.
For a pharmaceutical company evaluating whether a drug approved for one indication might work for another, or assessing safety signals across millions of patient encounters, having 129 million records accessible through a unified platform changes what's possible analytically.
"Fragmented, inconsistent data is a major barrier to progress, holding back life sciences organizations from delivering the medical breakthroughs that could transform and even save lives," said Seema Verma , executive vice president and general manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences.
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