A study presented at ASCO 2025 highlighted the benefits of MRI radiomics analysis in predicting treatment response in patients…
We scan the top radiology sources so you don’t have to.
From AI breakthroughs to imaging trends, we serve up real-time radiology insights.
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JACR Leadership
Radiology has always stood at the crossroads of technological advancement and patient care, and this has never been truer than the present time. As we step into a new era marked by rapid innovations in imaging technology including artificial intelligence, effective leadership in radiology is more important than ever before. Navigating complex health care systems requires agility, empathy, and resilience. The modern leader in radiology today must embrace the changing needs of the modern workforce…
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Diagnostic performance of abbreviated breast MRI in differentiating intraductal papilloma from ductal secretion
Breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is widely regarded as the most sensitive imaging modality for diagnosing breast diseases, particularly in the detection of malignant lesions [1]. Dynamic contrast-enhanced breast MRI (DCE-MRI), with its high sensitivity, has emerged as a critical tool in problem-solving, early detection, and evaluation of breast cancer and other pathologies [2,3]. Although conventional FDB-MRI protocols are considered the gold standard for screening high-risk individuals a…
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Performance of AI methods in PET-based imaging for outcome prediction in lymphoma: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Clonal proliferation of lymphocytes can result in various malignant lymphomas, including Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The majority of lymphoma cases (90 %) are NHL, predominantly originating from B cells [1,2]. NHL and HL accounted for 2.8 % and 0.4 % of new cancer diagnoses, and 2.6 % and 0.2 % of cancer-related deaths worldwide, respectively [3]. Identifying high-risk patients at diagnosis is crucial for treatment planning and precision medicine. Various prognostic met…
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ASCO: What New Mammography Research Reveals About Allostatic Load and Breast Density in Minority Women
High allostatic load, which has been linked to an increased incidence of breast cancer and all-cause mortality, is more than twice as likely to occur in Black and Hispanic women in comparison to White women, according to mammography research presented at American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) conference.
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Diagnostic Imaging's Weekly Scan: May 25 — May 31
Catch up on the top radiology content of the past week.
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Week in review: BRAID study and dense breasts | LCS and mammography | BPE and MRI performance
Our top story this week reported on promising results from the Breast screening Risk Adapted Imaging for Density (BRAID) study…