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.

Image of a Uterus

RACOON FADEN Project Tackles Early Detection of Adenomyosis

Endometriosis is a vastly under-researched condition affecting women, but it is finally receiving the attention it deserves through the RACOON FADEN project.

In an insightful interview, Prof. Dr. Sylvia Mechsner (Charité Berlin) and Prof. Dr. Matthias May (University Hospital Erlangen) discuss the RACOON FADEN project, which focuses on the early detection of adenomyosis, a form of endometriosis.

This project addresses a critical gap in the diagnosis and treatment of women with severe menstrual pain. The study uses MRI scans to detect early signs of adenomyosis and gain a deeper understanding of the morphology of a healthy uterus. Additionally, the interview highlights the innovative use of structured reporting and the existing RACOON infrastructure to enhance diagnostic precision and accelerate research.

Read the full interview here.

Related Resources

Related Resources

Prof. Frauenfelder and Mr. Steffen Rupp happy about extention of mint Lesion use in University Hospital Zürich

Transforming Oncology Patient Care

Innovative Approach to Structured Routine Reporting with mint Lesion at the University Hospital Zurich Heidelberg, DE, 05/09/2023 - Mint Medical…

University Hospital Jena: Research Investigating the Viability of Accelerating Whole-Body MRI in Children and Adolescents through STIR DWI with Simultaneous Multi-Slice Excitation

This study[1] addressed the challenges of conducting WB-MRI in paediatric patients, particularly the prolonged acquisition time required for…

WUSTL: Discrepant Assessments of Progressive Disease in Clinical Trials between Routine Clinical Reads and Formal RECIST 1.1 Interpretations

In this retrospective study utilizing the mint Lesion™ software[1], researchers found that routine clinical interpretations frequently resulted in the…