Abstract

Medical imaging has seen substantial and rapid technical advances during the past decade, including advances in image acquisition devices, processing and analysis software, and agents to enhance specificity. Traditionally, medical imaging has defined anatomy, but increasingly newer, more advanced, imaging technologies provide biochemical and physiologic information based on both static and dynamic modalities. These advanced technologies are important not only for detecting disease but for characterizing and assessing change of disease with time or therapy. Because of the rapidity of these advances, research to determine the utility of quantitative imaging in either clinical research or clinical practice has not had time to mature. Methods to appropriately develop, assess, regulate, and reimburse must be established for these advanced technologies. Efficient and methodical processes that meet the needs of stakeholders in the biomedical research community, therapeutics developers, and health care delivery enterprises will ultimately benefit individual patients. To help address this, the authors formed a collaborative program-the Quantitative Imaging Biomarker Alliance. This program draws from the very successful precedent set by the Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise effort but is adapted to the needs of imaging science. Strategic guidance supporting the development, qualification, and deployment of quantitative imaging biomarkers will lead to improved standardization of imaging tests, proof of imaging test performance, and greater use of imaging to predict the biologic behavior of tissue and monitor therapy response. These, in turn, confer value to corporate stakeholders, providing incentives to bring new and innovative products to market.

Keywords

MedicineStandardizationModalitiesMedical imagingHealth careSoftware deploymentStakeholderEmerging technologiesMedical physicsProcess managementComputer scienceRadiologyBusinessArtificial intelligence

MeSH Terms

BiomarkersBiomedical ResearchCooperative BehaviorDiagnostic ImagingDiffusion of InnovationHumansIndustry

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2011
Type
article
Volume
258
Issue
3
Pages
906-914
Citations
180
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

180
OpenAlex
5
Influential
146
CrossRef

Cite This

Andrew J. Buckler, Linda Bresolin, N. Reed Dunnick et al. (2011). A Collaborative Enterprise for Multi-Stakeholder Participation in the Advancement of Quantitative Imaging. Radiology , 258 (3) , 906-914. https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.10100799

Identifiers

DOI
10.1148/radiol.10100799
PMID
21339352

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%