July 7, 2025 | AI, AI in Healthcare, AI in medical affairs, MAPS EMEA 2025, Medical Affairs Professional Society (MAPS), Real-world AI implementation, medical affairs
By Steve Wilson

Implementing AI in regulated industries like healthcare requires more than advanced technology. It demands strategic foresight, cross-functional collaboration and a strong focus on compliance, user needs and long-term value.
At our workshop at MAPS (Medical Affairs Professional Society) EMEA 2025 on ‘Implementation of AI in the Real World: Cultivating Collaboration for Success’, we brought together cross-functional leaders to explore the practicalities of AI deployment.
The session was split into two parts. In Part 1, participants were challenged to configure the most effective project team, considering both content and technology needs, while navigating the approach compliantly. Part 2 focused on identifying immediate and long‑term challenges and exploring strategies to mitigate them.
The insights were clear: successful AI implementation hinges on a holistic, collaborative approach. Here are some of the key outputs:
AI implementation isn’t just an IT project – it’s a business-wide transformation. Success demands early and sustained collaboration across medical affairs, project management, IT/digital, legal, compliance, data privacy, and commercial teams. External stakeholders, including healthcare professionals (HCPs), agencies and end users, must also be engaged from the outset.
This integrated approach ensures that AI solutions are not only technically sound but also ethically aligned, compliant with regulations and user centric.
AI systems – especially chatbots or decision-support tools – are only as good as the content they are trained on. A well-organized, meticulously tagged content library covering FAQs, product labels and clinical trial data is essential. To maintain safety, accuracy and compliance, teams must implement strong guardrails, prompting frameworks and ongoing content governance.
Rather than viewing compliance as a hurdle, workshop participants emphasized its role as a strategic enabler. Early involvement of legal and compliance teams, clear governance models and robust quality control processes are key. Addressing risks like hallucinations, off-label content and adverse event reporting must be built into the AI lifecycle from day one.
Time constraints, budget limitations and stakeholder alignment remain common hurdles – yet these challenges also drive innovation. Teams are finding creative ways to adapt; phased rollouts, pilot testing, modular design, and leveraging internal champions are just a few strategies that emerged.
From a technology standpoint, personalization, analytics, and modularity are proving essential. One team even reported finding the “perfect recipe” for their AI setup, demonstrating that with the right ingredients, success is achievable.
Despite the complexities, the potential rewards are immense. AI can unlock deeper customer insights, streamline HCP engagement and accelerate cross-functional collaboration. When implemented thoughtfully, it can extend beyond its original scope – driving innovation, improving patient outcomes and delivering measurable return on investment.
Here are our five key steps to success in real-world AI implementation:
The future of AI isn’t just about technology, it’s about people, purpose and partnership. And, in case you’re wondering, yes, we did follow our own advice and used AI to help us draft this summary.
To learn more about how AMICULUM can support you in your AI implementation journey, contact Steve Wilson at stephen.wilson@amiculum.biz.
For more insights, visit the AMICULUM News and Insights page.
This content was provided by Amiculum
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