The Knowledge Hub for Medical Imaging Professionals: Transforming Radiology with Structured Reporting, Data-Driven Approaches and Multicentric Research

Access breakthrough research, innovative case studies and collaborative projects advancing radiology worldwide. Dive into our activities and product updates, and learn who we are as a company and as a team.

Daniel Clark

At Mint Medical we are committed to pushing forward the industry to improve all aspects of radiology-related and radiology-adjacent healthcare - including routine care, diagnosis, staging, research and clinical research - and along the entire journey collecting the inherent data in order to drive solutions and increase access. We all know somebody who has been through the healthcare system and could have benefited from more solutions, options, transparency, or treatment possibilities. We are committed to addressing this need and bringing benefit to everybody.

Related Resources

Related Resources

Dr. Madelaine Hettler from University Medical Center Mannheim discusses the RACOON-SAGA project and how it improves sarcoma diagnostics.

Rare Tumors, Big Goals: How RACOON-SAGA Aims to Improve Therapy Decisions

Rare tumors, major challenges: The RACOON-SAGA project explores how imaging and clinical data can improve the pre-therapeutic characterization of soft…

Portrait of Univ.-Prof. Dr. Thorsten Persigehl, expert in oncologic imaging at University Hospital Cologne

Structured Reporting and Artificial Intelligence in Prostate Diagnostics: An Interview with Prof. Dr. Thorsten Persigehl

What does radiology look like when structured reporting meets artificial intelligence? A look into the daily practice of Prof. Dr. Thorsten Persigehl…

Image of Dr. Madelaine Hettler during interview on RACOON-SAGA: interdisciplinary project using MRI parameters (ADC) and clinical data to improve therapy decisions in sarcomas.

RACOON SAGA: Interdisciplinary Research for Better Therapy Decisions in Sarcoma Treatment

Sarcomas are rare tumors that pose particular challenges to both medicine and research. Their heterogeneity makes precise diagnostics difficult, which…