Stay Informed: Transforming Radiology with Structured Reporting and Data-Driven Approaches

Dive into our activities, projects, and product updates. Catch on the latest industry news and learn who we are as a company and as a team.

This picture shows two men (one is a doctor) looking at a medical image within the program mint Lesion™

BZKF BORN Roll-Out Trainings in Full Swing

A first impression of the on-site BZKF BORN Roll-Out Trainings at LMU Klinikum München with our expert Steffen Rupp. The project is in full swing: the templates that were previously developed at six university hospitals are now being used and tested in their clinical routine.

The goal of the Bavaria-wide Oncological Radiology Network (BORN) is to help patients and healthcare professionals across the state. The project carries out cancer imaging examinations in a standardized manner, evaluates them systematically, and establishes the requisite framework for data collection and exchange. It thus creates a globally unique data base for diagnosing and treating cancer.

Mint Medical and Brainlab are working closely with the university hospitals and the Bayerisches Zentrum für Krebsforschung (BZKF) to establish uniform and structured reporting in oncological imaging, as well as to develop a secure IT infrastructure for the capture and exchange of data.

(Image shows anonymized demo case.)

Further information about the project is available here: www.bzkf.de/born/

Related Resources

Related Resources

Study Analyzing the Tumor Growth Rate as a Prognostic Biomarker in Lymphoma Patients Under CAR T-Cell Therapy

University Hospital Munich (LMU): Study Analyzing the Tumor Growth Rate as a Prognostic Biomarker in Lymphoma Patients Under CAR T-Cell Therapy

A recent study[1] conducted by researchers at the University Hospital Munich (LMU) investigated the role of tumor growth rate (TGR) in predicting the…

A picture of a person looking at a brain scan and the interface of mint Lesion™  on a computer

Advancing Neuro-Oncology Assessments: Mint Medical to Integrate Newly Published RANO 2.0 Criteria into mint Lesion™

Glioblastomas and other gliomas are the most common malignant primary brain tumor types, yet few effective therapies are available. Clinical research…

A person looking at MRI and CT scans on a  computer

Study Discovers Overdiagnosis of Progressive Cancer in Routine Clinical Evaluations

A recent retrospective study led by Dr. Marilyn J. Siegel and her team at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has shed light on…