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How AI Is Changing Medical Imaging

Mike McNamara
Mike McNamara

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Healthcare costs continue to rise, clinicians are overworked, and patient data privacy, security, and compliance are ongoing concerns. With limited budgets and shrinking margins, healthcare organizations must find new ways to improve operational efficiency while meeting—or exceeding—the highest standards of patient care. According to a Deloitte 2019 Global Healthcare Outlook report, expenditures on healthcare services are expected to increase at an annual rate of 5.4% between 2017 and 2022—from $7.7 trillion to $10 trillion.



Healthcare organizations are looking to AI to improve efficiencies and reduce costs. From medical imaging to robot-assisted surgery to drug discovery, AI is getting better and more sophisticated at doing what humans do—and doing it more accurately, faster, and at lower cost. According to the Accenture report “Artificial Intelligence (AI): Healthcare’s New Nervous System,” by 2026 AI is expected to create up to $150 billion in annual savings for the healthcare industry.



With the growing focus on early intervention, preventive healthcare, and digital transformation, healthcare organizations are increasing their adoption of medical imaging technologies. Advances in  these technologies, including 3D and 4D capabilities, real-time analytics, and processing accelerated by graphics processing units (GPUs), give radiologists powerful tools to make faster and more accurate diagnoses and help to prevent radiologist burnout.

Improved Diagnostics

Many cancers start with changes so small that no human can detect them, even with current medical imaging technology. However, AI programs can be trained with deep learning to see the very earliest changes in cell structure that typically develop into cancerous cells. These programs can alert oncologists, who can then guide patient care protocols with greater accuracy and effectiveness. For example, the use of AI is reducing diagnostic errors in breast cancer detection by 85%.

Preventing Radiologist Burnout

Modern imaging technologies generate an overwhelming amount of information that can be difficult and time consuming for radiologists to process manually. Specialized AI applications can support radiologists and prevent burnout by “triaging” stacks of images. By quickly sorting out normal images and flagging exceptions, the radiologist can spot the images that show anomalies or indicators of disease and focus on diagnosing and treating the disease instead of screening images. For example, AI enables MRIs to accelerate image reconstruction by 100 times, and with 5 times greater accuracy.



To learn more, go to www.netapp.com/ai.

Mike McNamara

Mike McNamara

Mike McNamaraは、NetAppの製品およびソリューション マーケティング担当シニア リーダーであり、25年以上にわたってデータ管理とクラウド ストレージ マーケティングに携わってきました。10年以上前にNetAppに入社する前は、Adaptec、Dell EMC、HPEで勤務していました。また、主要なチーム リーダーとして、ファーストパーティのクラウド ストレージ サービスや、業界初のクラウド対応AI/MLソリューション(NetApp)、ユニファイド スケールアウトおよびハイブリッド クラウド ストレージ システムおよびソフトウェア(NetApp)、iSCSIおよびSASストレージ システムおよびソフトウェア(Adaptec)、ファイバチャネル ストレージ システム(EMC CLARiX)の発売を推進しました。過去には、Fibre Channel Industry Associationのマーケティング分野の議長を務めたこともあり、Ethernet Technology Summitの諮問会議や、Ethernet Allianceの現役メンバーとして、業界誌に頻繁に寄稿しているほか、各種イベントにスピーカーとして数多く登壇しています。さらに、FriesenPressより『Scale-Out Storage - The Next Frontier in Enterprise Data Management』というタイトルの書籍を発行しているほか、KaposによりB2B製品マーケティング担当トップ50に選出されたこともあります。Mike McNamaraのすべての投稿を見る

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How AI Is Changing Medical Imaging | NetApp Blog