In honor of Nuclear Medicine Week, the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging highlights four major advancements in the field.
It’s Nuclear Medicine Week, which means it’s a good time to reflect on some major advances in the field this year.
The Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging and the SNMMI Technologist Section compiled a list of four highlights:
• FDA’s approval of florbetapir for amyloid imaging
• The first results of PET/MR in clinical use
• Dose optimization efforts, including Image Gently’s guidelines for nuclear medicine
• Increased use of molecular breast imaging
Looking forward to next year, the society noted that appropriate use criteria for amyloid imaging will be released, and the FDA is expected to approve radium-223 for treatment of recurrent prostate cancer. “We are hopeful that several other radiotracers will be approved by the FDA in the coming year as well,” Frederic H. Fahey, DSc, SNMMI president, said in a statement. “In addition, SNMMI’s global initiative will also be well underway and a worldwide collaboration will be in place to advance the field.”
What are some other notable nuclear medicine moments from this year?
FDA Clears Remote Scanning Support Platform for MRI, CT and PET/CT
March 25th 2024The multimodality system nCommand Lite reportedly facilitates real-time remote imaging guidance on scanning parameters and procedure assessments to licensed technologists for a variety of imaging modalities including CT and MRI.
Study: PET/MRI May Prevent Up to 83 Percent of Unnecessary Biopsies in Men with PI-RADS 3 Lesions
March 15th 2024For men with PI-RADS 3 lesions, PRIMARY scores of 4-5 with PET/MRI had a sensitivity rate of 87.5 percent for clinically significant prostate cancer, according to newly published research.