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.

Image of a female doctor holding a hologram of a lung

Structured Reporting Improves TNM Classification Accuracy and Radiologist Satisfaction

In a collaborative, multi-center study, radiology experts developed and validated in mint Lesion a software-assisted structured reporting (SR) framework for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) staging.

Findings revealed that SR significantly improved TNM classification accuracy, reducing common errors in T-, N-, and M-staging compared to traditional free-text reports. Radiologists using SR were more likely to classify cases correctly and rated the tool highly for enhancing report quality, completeness, and interdisciplinary communication. This study suggests that SR may not only improve clinical accuracy but also support data standardization for future lung cancer research.

Read a summary of the study here.

Related Resources

Related Resources

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…

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…

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…