Technology Report:

Artificial Intelligence

1299 6264744352001
Overview of the integration of AI into radiology in 2021
Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected

      Technology Report: Artificial Intelligence in Radiology 2021

      This is an overview of trends and technologies in radiology artificial intelligence (AI) applications in 2021. Views were shared by 11 radiologists using AI and industry leaders, which include:

      Randy Hicks, M.D., MBA, radiologist and CEO of Reginal Medical Imaging (RMI), and an iCAD Profound AI user.

      • Prof. Dr. Thomas Frauenfelder, University of Zurich, Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, and Riverain AI user. 

      • Amy Patel, M.D., medical director of Liberty Hospital Women’s Imaging, assistant professor of radiology at UMKC, and user of Kios AI for breast ultrasound. 

      Sham Sokka, Ph.D., vice president and head of innovation, precision diagnosis, Philips Healthcare.

      Ivo Dreisser, Siemens Healthineers, global marketing manager for the AI Rad Companion.

      Bill Lacey, vice president of medical informatics, Fujifilm Medical Systems USA.

      • Karley Yoder, vice president and general manager, artificial intelligence, GE Healthcare.

      Georges Espada, head of Agfa Healthcare digital and computed radiography business unit.

      Pooja Rao, head of research and development and co-founder of Qure.ai.

      Jill Hamman, world-wide marketing manager at Carestream Health.

      Sebastian Nickel, Siemens Healthineers, global product manager for the AI Pathway Companion. 

      There has been a change in attitudes about AI on the expo floor at the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) over the last two years. AI conversations were originally 101 level and discussed how AI technology could be trained to sort photos of dogs and cats. However, in 2020, with numerous FDA approvals for various AI applications, the conversations at RSNA, and industry wide, have shifted to that of accepting the validity of AI. Radiologists now want to discuss how a specific AI algorithm is going to help them save time, make more accurate diagnoses and make them more efficient.

      With a higher level of maturity in AI and the technology seeing wider adoption, radiologists using it say AI gives them additional confidence in their diagnoses, and can even help readers who may not be deep experts in the exam type they are being asked to read. 

      With a myriad of new AI apps gaining regulatory approval from scores of imaging vendors, the biggest challenge for getting this technology into hospitals is an easy to integrate format. This has led to several vendors creating AI app stores. These allow AI apps to integrate easily into radiology workflows because the apps are already integrated as third-party software into a larger radiology vendors' IT platform.  

      There are now hundreds of AI applications that do a wide variety of analysis, from data analytics, image reconstruction, disease and anatomy identification, automating measurements and advanced visualization. The AI applications can be divided into 2 basic types — AI to improve workflow, and AI for clinical decision support, such as diagnostic aids.

      On the workflow side, several vendors are leveraging AI to pull together all of a patients' information, prior exams and reports in one location and to digest the information so it is easier for the radiologist to consume. Often the AI pulls only data and priors that relate to a specific question being asked, based on the imaging protocol used for the exam. One example of this is the Siemens Healthineers AI Clinical Pathway and Siemens AI integrations with PACS to automate measurements and advanced visualization.

      AI is also helping simplify complex tasks and help reduce the reading time on involved exams. One example of this is in 3-D breast tomosythesis with hundreds of images, which is rapidly replacing 2-D mammography, which only produces 4 images. Another example is automated image reconstruction algorithms to significantly reduce manual work. AI also is now being integrated directly into several vendors' imaging systems to speed workflow and improve image quality.

      Vendors say AI is here to stay. They explain the future of AI will be automation to help improve image quality, simplify manual processes, improved diagnostic quality, new ways to analyze data, and workflow aids that operate in the background as part of a growing number of software solutions. 

      Several vendors at RSNA 2020 noted that AI's biggest impact in the coming years will be its ability to augment and speed the workflow for the small number of radiologists compared to the quickly growing elder patient populations worldwide. There also are applications in rural and developing countries were there are very low numbers of physicians or specialists.

       

      Related AI in Medical Imaging Content:

      AI Outperforms Humans in Creating Cancer Treatments, But Do Doctors Trust It?

      VIDEO: Artificial Intelligence For MRI Helps Overcome Backlog of Exams Due to COVID

      How AI is Helping the Fight Against Breast Cancer

      VIDEO: Use of Artificial Intelligence in Nuclear Imaging

      3 High-impact AI Market Trends in Radiology at RSNA 2019

       

      Photo Gallery of New Imaging Technologies at RSNA 2019

      VIDEO: Editors Choice of the Most Innovative New Radiology Technology at RSNA 2019

      Study Reveals New Comprehensive AI Chest X-ray Solution Improves Radiologist Accuracy

      VIDEO: Real-world Use of AI to Detect Hemorrhagic Stroke

      The Radiology AI Evolution at RSNA 2019

       

      Eliminating Bias from Healthcare AI Critical to Improve Health Equity

      VIDEO: FDA Cleared Artificial Intelligence for Immediate Results of Head CT Scans

      Building the Future of AI Through Data

      WEBINAR: Do More, Perform Better: Delivering Clinical Quality through Advanced Radiology and Artificial Intelligence

      Integrating Artificial Intelligence in Treatment Planning

       

      Selecting an AI Marketplace for Radiology: Key Considerations for Healthcare Providers

      Artificial Intelligence Improves Accuracy of Breast Ultrasound Diagnoses

      Artificial Intelligence Greatly Speeds Radiation Therapy Treatment Planning

      WEBINAR: Building the Bridge - How Imaging AI is Delivering Clinical Value Across the Care Continuum

      AI in Medical Imaging Market to Reach $1.5B by 2024

       

      VIDEO: AI-Assisted Automatic Ejection Fraction for Point-of-Care Ultrasound

      5 Trends in Enterprise Imaging and PACS Systems

      VIDEO: Artificial Intelligence to Automate CT Calcium Scoring and Radiomics

      Scale AI in Imaging Now for the Post-COVID Era

      VIDEO: Integrating Artificial Intelligence Into Radiologists Workflow

       

      Northwestern Medicine Introduces Artificial Intelligence to Improve Ultrasound Imaging

      Find more artificial intelligence news and video

       

       

       

      Sidebar Videos

      Artificial Intelligence |

      At RSNA19, GE Healthcare introduced its Edison Open AI Orchestrator. The software has been designed to operate smart algorithms that might save radiologists time. ITN Contributing Editor Greg Freiherr discusses its benefits with Karley Yoder, vice president and general manager of artificial intelligence for GE.

       

      Related GE Edison Platform Content:

      GE Healthcare Unveils New Applications and Smart Devices Built on Edison Platform

      VIDEO: itnTV Conversations — What is Edison?

      Artificial Intelligence |

      GE launched a new brand that covers artificial intelligence (AI) at the Radiological Socoety of North American (RSNA) 2018 meeting. The company showed several works-in-progress, including a critical care suite of algorithms and experimental applications for brain MR. Each is being built on GE's Edison Platform.

       

      Related GE Edison Platform Content:

      GE Healthcare Unveils New Applications and Smart Devices Built on Edison Platform

      VIDEO: itnTV Conversations — What is Edison?

      Artificial Intelligence |

      At RSNA 2018, iCad showed how its ProFound AI for digital breast tomosynthesis technology might help in the interpretation of tomosynthesis exams. Rodney Hawkins, vice president of marketing for iCad, discusses how this technology can better help detect the cancer.

      Related content:

      Artificial Intelligence 2018: What Radiologists Need to Know About AI

      RSNA 2018 Sunday – Improving, Not Replacing

      Artificial Intelligence |

      Artificial intelligence can do more than assist in the interpretation of patient images. At RSNA 2018, Imalogix showed how its unique AI application can help meet compliance requirements, directly improve patient safety and increase efficiencies.

       

      Related Artificial Intelligence Content

      Technology Report: Artificial Intelligence 2018

      VIDEO: RSNA Post-game Report on Artificial Intelligence

      VIDEO: AI in Tumor Diagnostics, Treatment and Follow-up

      VIDEO: Artificial Intelligence May Help Reduce Gadolinium Dose in MRI

      VIDEO: AI, Analytics and Informatics: The Future is Here

      Artificial Intelligence |

      Change Healthcare is looking at how to apply AI into enterprise imaging by using algorithms to change data into knowledge. For more information go to www.changehealthcare.com.

      Related Content

      News
      March 10, 2025 — Lunit, a provider of AI-powered solutions for cancer diagnostics and therapeutics, has published a p
      Time | March 10, 2025
      arrow
      News
      March 3, 2025 — Microsoft Corp.
      Time | March 03, 2025
      arrow
      News
      Feb. 4, 2025 — Riverain Technologies recently announced it expanded across eight countries in 2024 and added nearly 5
      Time | February 04, 2025
      arrow
      Subscribe Now