This week, our sister site, AuntMinnieEurope, has been chock-full of reporting on the ECR in Vienna, Austria, and we've been sharing some of the content on AuntMinnie as well. For full ECR coverage, click here.
Our top AuntMinnie story of the week described sobering results from a Lancet Oncology study that found that global breast cancer cases are on the rise and could hit 3.5 million by 2050. Our second most-popular article featured an interview with Charlotte Taylor, MD, vice chair of education and residency program director at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. Taylor discussed how the American Board of Radiology (ABR) board certification timeline will affect residents.
Readers also showed interest in a study out of Stanford that found an AI model shows promise for reading CT scans like radiologists do -- that is, in three dimensions. Fourth on the week's list was an article about how media reporting may overlook key aspects of breast cancer screening guidelines, while our fifth most-clicked story covered a March 3 U.S. Senate committee hearing on AI safety and productivity in the healthcare sphere.
See below for the complete list of this week's top articles:
- Lancet Oncology: Global breast cancer cases could surge to 3.5M by 2050
- Radiology programs prepare for ABR board certification timeline shift
- AI model shows promise for reading CT scans like a radiologist would
- Media reporting overlooks parts of breast cancer screening guidelines
- Local or regional clinical AI test beds may emerge in U.S.
- Survey: Most ultrasound users may not have access to cleaning guides
- ECR: Lessons from ACR's improvement initiative on prostate MRI quality
- CEUS with perfluorobutane diagnoses small-cell HCC
- Ablation as effective as surgery for treating small kidney cancers
- ECR: Radiologists discuss evidence for, societal impact of radiology AI
- ECR: 'Black swan events' demand informed imaging infrastructure
- HPI: Workforce attrition higher in radiology subspecialties
- DL segmentation of chest muscle volume shows promise for COPD patients
- Ultrasound MinnieCast, Episode 3: Focused ultrasound brings hope to patients
Kate Madden Yee
Senior Editor
AuntMinnie.com
