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

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Several juxtaposed images of different patients with different responses to the cancer treatment

Study with mint Lesion™ compares the Efficacy of SIRT and CS-PHP in Uveal Melanoma with Hepatic Metastasis

A study conducted by researchers at University Hospital Tuebingen retrospectively compared two liver-targeted therapies for uveal melanoma patients with liver metastases. The results showed that Chemosaturation-Percutaneous Hepatic Perfusion (CS-PHP) had significantly longer overall survival (516 days) compared to Transarterial Radioembolization (SIRT) (300.5 days).

mint Lesion™ was used to assess the treatment efficacy in line with the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST 1.1). The study observed that the disease control rate, which includes Complete Response (CR), Partial Response (PR), and Stable Disease (SD), was 18% for SIRT and 30% for CS-PHP.

These findings highlight the need for further research and prospective randomized trials to optimize liver-targeted treatment strategies and address the challenges faced by patients with this condition. Learn more.

Related Resources

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Participants at a BZKF event during a lecture, including the Bavarian Minister of State for Science and the Arts, Markus Blume

Launch of the Bavarian Oncology Radiology Network (BORN) Project

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Improving the diagnosis and treatment of cancer patients by harnessing the potential of digitalization and standardization is the ultimate ambition of…

Two computer screens showing the mint Lesion™user interface: a comparison of scans and an evaluation as a diagram

Scientifically proven benefits of mint Lesion™ in clinical routine

In contrast to clinical trials, unstructured free-text reporting is still common in the clinical routine. Such reports often lack content and clarity,…

Radiological Cooperative Network (RACOON)

RACOON - What's Next?

Since mid-2020, mint Lesion™ has been successfully used within the Radiological Cooperative Network (RACOON), in the University Medicine Network which…