A healthcare centre is procuring an upgrade to its radiology information system, adding AI modules and linking imaging data into a shared digital platform.
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Warszawskie Centrum Opieki Medycznej KOPERNIK Sp. z o.o. has published a contract notice for the expansion of its RIS radiology system, moving to an AI-ready version and integrating with an Intelligent Services Platform. The move underlines how hospital imaging is being reshaped by digital tools, with radiology data expected to flow into wider clinical and analytics platforms.
The notice, published on 24th February 2026, sets out plans to upgrade the centre’s existing radiology information system (RIS) to a ROS version that supports AI modules. Rather than replacing the system outright, the contract focuses on building on what is already installed and extending it with new capabilities.
The core of the brief is twofold: a technical lift to the ROS version of the RIS, and explicit support for AI modules. While the notice does not spell out individual AI use cases, similar procurements show what hospitals are looking for from such tools. At SZPITAL KLINICZNY im. Dr. E. Warmińskiego Politechniki Bydgoskiej SPZOZ w Bydgoszczy, for example, a January 2026 contract for an integrated RIS, PACS and VNA system highlights AI for patient triage and diagnostic support.
Other hospitals frame AI as a way to strengthen day-to-day diagnostics. The Dolnośląski Szpital Specjalistyczny im. T. Marciniaka – Centrum Medycyny Ratunkowej is procuring a RIS/PACS/VNA system that “enhances imaging diagnostics” and includes cybersecurity and AI solutions. At Samodzielny Publiczny Zakład Opieki Zdrowotnej Szpital im. dr. J. Dietla w Krynicy-Zdroju, an IT modernisation project explicitly refers to using AI to “enhance diagnostic and therapeutic processes.”
Against this backdrop, the Kopernik centre’s focus on ROS with AI module support places it firmly within an emerging category of imaging platforms designed not just to store and route images, but to host algorithms that assist clinicians in interpreting them.
The second pillar of the Kopernik contract is integration of the upgraded RIS with an Intelligent Services Platform. This platform appears across a growing number of hospital tenders and is increasingly treated as core national infrastructure for digital health.
Samodzielny Publiczny Zakład Opieki Zdrowotnej Szpital im. dr. J. Dietla w Krynicy-Zdroju is modernising its domain systems “for data integration with the Intelligent Services Platform, utilizing AI to enhance diagnostic and therapeutic processes.” The Wojewódzki Szpital Specjalistyczny im. Stefana Kardynała Wyszyńskiego has gone to market for IT system expansion that includes analytical and design work, AI implementation and user training, all to support integration with this same platform.
In Zawiercie, a County Hospital is procuring an integration and data exchange service with the Intelligent Services Platform developed by the National e-Health Centre, specifically to enhance its radiology system as part of a digital transformation project. Other buyers, such as Centrum Onkologii im. Franciszka Łukaszczyka w Bydgoszczy, are seeking delivery, implementation and integration of PACS/RIS with both their HIS and the Intelligent Services Platform.
For the Kopernik centre, integrating RIS with this platform is likely to be as significant as the AI upgrade itself. Similar notices suggest that platform connections are used to exchange imaging and documentation with wider hospital systems, central repositories and, in some cases, biobanks. At Uniwersyteckie Centrum Kliniczne im. prof. K. Gibińskiego Śląskiego Uniwersytetu Medycznego w Katowicach, for example, one contract covers integrating an existing VNA system with the platform, while a separate notice extends the LIS/PIS system with a BIOBANK module.
The Kopernik tender lands amid a dense stream of similar procurements. Since November 2025, hospitals have repeatedly gone to market for upgrades that combine RIS/PACS modernisation, AI and connectivity to central platforms.
On 4th November 2025, the Wojewódzki Specjalistyczny Szpital Dziecięcy im. św. Ludwika w Krakowie published a contract notice for an AI Imaging Documentation solution that integrates with the CeZ system and adapts HIS, RIS and PACS. Later that month, SZPITAL PRASKI P.W. PRZEMIENIENIA PAŃSKIEGO Sp. z o.o. issued a tender to replace its RIS and expand PACS servers with AI capabilities, ensuring full integration with the hospital system and enabling remote examination review and description.
Through December 2025, integration and expansion projects continued. Samodzielny Publiczny Zakład Opieki Zdrowotnej w Łapach is procuring integration of its PACS with PUI, expansion of RIS/PACS with AI modules, a server purchase and technical support. Mazowiecki Szpital Specjalistyczny Sp. z o.o. is buying a diagnostic imaging system with modules for teleradiology, DICOM integration and AI solutions to strengthen its IT infrastructure.
Digitisation of medical documentation sits alongside imaging upgrades. Wojewódzki Szpital Dziecięcy im. J. Brudzińskiego w Bydgoszczy is tendering for IT systems integration and expansion that includes a new RIS/PACS, servers, storage and a document digitisation system. Szpital Dziecięcy Polanki im. Macieja Płażyńskiego w Gdańsku Sp. z o.o. is expanding its HIS and RIS/PACS with new electronic medical documentation modules and integration with the Intelligent Services Platform, as part of a project funded by KPO.
Several notices underline that digital imaging is inseparable from cybersecurity and resilience. The Wojewódzki Szpital Specjalistyczny im. Błogosławionego Księdza Jerzego Popiełuszki we Włocławku is extending its PACS/RIS with new modules, improving integration with the Intelligent Services Platform, expanding backup capabilities and increasing PACS licences, backed by a three-year warranty and support. In Bochnia, the County Hospital is pursuing expansion and integration of RIS/PACS with primary care units as part of a comprehensive transformation and cybersecurity effort.
Other buyers stress broader organisational change. Samodzielny Publiczny Zespół Opieki Zdrowotnej w Brzesku, for instance, is modernising its PACS while explicitly referencing environmental and equality principles. “Poddębickie Centrum Zdrowia” Sp. z o.o. is expanding its HIS and PACS/RIS, migrating applications to new infrastructure, digitising medical documentation and integrating with the Intelligent Services Platform, with technical support built in.
Taken together, these notices point to a rapidly maturing market in which hospitals expect imaging systems to be tightly integrated, AI-capable and aligned with shared digital platforms. For suppliers looking at the Kopernik tender, several themes stand out from the wider pipeline:
The Kopernik centre’s contract aligns closely with these trends: it combines an AI-ready RIS upgrade with platform integration, rather than treating them as separate projects. Other notices suggest that such work often forms part of wider digital transformation initiatives, sometimes backed by dedicated funding streams and explicitly linked to cybersecurity and equality considerations.
The next steps will depend on supplier responses and contract award decisions, which are not detailed in the notice. What is clear from the broader set of procurements is that once core integrations are in place, hospitals tend to return to market for further modules, infrastructure and services. Observers can expect continued activity around RIS/PACS/VNA modernisation, Intelligent Services Platform connectivity and AI-enabled imaging, with the Kopernik upgrade as one more signal that these capabilities are becoming standard expectations in hospital IT.
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