GEHCV GE HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGIES INC

 GE HealthCare’s growing list of medical institutions conducting human subject research studies with its novel photon counting CTi technology further expands with the addition of Stanford Medicine

As part of a research study, researchers at Stanford Medicine, Department of Radiology recently began scanning human subjects on GE HealthCare’s novel photon counting CT prototype designed with Deep Silicon detectors,i,ii which aims to greatly enhance imaging capabilities and provide clinicians the information and data they need to help enable improved patient outcomes across oncology, cardiology, neurology, and other clinical CT applications.

Photon counting CT technology has the potential to further improve the capabilities of traditional CT, including the visualization of minute details of organ structures, improved tissue characterization, more accurate material density measurement (or quantification), and lower radiation dose. Altogether, it has the promise to be a substantial step forward for CT imaging that can potentially benefit millions of patients worldwide.

“As a CT researcher, it is especially exciting to see this new advancement in CT technology,” shares David Larson, MD, MBA, Executive Vice Chair, Department of Radiology, Stanford Medicine.iii “Since its invention 50 years ago, CT has become a major workhorse in medical imaging across the world. Photon counting technology marks what is probably the most significant technological advancement in CT in more than a decade, and perhaps longer.”

Stanford Medicine researchers will facilitate human subject research and produce technical feedback to test and help advance GE HealthCare’s photon counting CT technology with Deep Silicon. The study will assess reconstruction methods, image presentation workflows, and clinical benefits for specific pathologies and disease types to help optimize GE HealthCare’s patented technology to enable better visualization and utilization.

Achieving greater depth with Deep Silicon technology

From the first x-ray machines to the first silicon-based photon counting prototype, GE HealthCare is committed to pioneering next generation imaging technology. GEiv researchers began studying photon counting CT in 1993 and developed the world’s first photon counting CT prototype using cadmium-based detectors in 2006.

After three decades of research and development, GE HealthCare has chosen Deep Silicon as the semiconductor material of choice for its photon counting CT detector due to its potential to deliver outstanding spatial resolution without compromising count rate or spectral resolution – all with the goal of helping clinicians’ realize the full potential of spectral CT.

As a semi-conductor material, silicon has a number of advantages including its purity, abundance, and broad manufacturing infrastructure. Historically, the main challenge with the use of silicon as a detector material is that it is too thin to stop and collect a sufficient number of x-ray photons. GE HealthCare has overcome this challenge with a patented, novel approach, positioning the silicon sensors ‘edge on’ so the detector is deep enough to absorb very high energy photons and fast enough to count and quantify the energies of hundreds of millions of x-ray photons per second. This way, the effective depth of the detector is determined not by the thickness of the silicon, but by its length – allowing the detector to have as long an absorption length as necessary. This is why it is called “Deep Silicon.”

“The installation of this GE HealthCare prototype marks our first photon counting CT scanner, and first whole-body scanner at the Stanford Research Park, where our research activities continue to grow,” explains Adam Wang, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Radiology and, by courtesy, Electrical Engineering, Stanford University.iii

The prototype installation at Stanford Medicine comes less than a year after GE HealthCare announced its at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and two years after the establishment of its with Karolinska Institutet and MedTechLabs in Sweden.

“The collaborative spirit shared by Stanford Medicine, UW—Madison, Karolinska Institutet, MedTechLabs, and our GE HealthCare team defines our institutions and is foundational to the success we are seeing with photon counting CT technology utilizing Deep Silicon detectors,” reflects Jean-Luc Procaccini, President and CEO, Molecular Imaging & Computed Tomography, GE HealthCare. “We are thrilled to work with Stanford Medicine’s team of seasoned researchers and clinicians as we continue to evolve this cutting-edge technology based on the valuable insights they and all our collaborators provide. Together, we are making giant leaps forward in what we expect will be a breakthrough in CT technology for the next several decades.”

For more information on GE HealthCare’s unique approach to photon counting CT with deep silicon detectors, visit .

i Technology in development that represents ongoing research and development efforts. These technologies are not products and may never become products. Not for sale. Not cleared or approved by the U.S. FDA or any other global regulator for commercial availability. Not CE marked.

ii The study is being conducted with the approval of the Institutional Review Boards.

iii The statements by GE HealthCare’s customers described here are based on their own opinions and on results that were achieved in the customer’s unique setting. Since there is no “typical” hospital and many variables exist, i.e. hospital size, case mix, etc.. there can be no guarantee that other customers will achieve the same results.

iv A trademark of General Electric Corporation.

EN
09/10/2023

Underlying

To request access to management, click here to engage with our
partner Phoenix-IR's CorporateAccessNetwork.com

Reports on GE HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGIES INC

 PRESS RELEASE

GE HealthCare launches AI-driven, patient-friendly Invenia ABUS Premiu...

CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) announced the launch of Invenia™ Automated Breast Ultrasound (ABUS) Premium, the latest 3D ultrasound offering advanced artificial intelligence (AI) and innovative features to drive faster*, reproducible supplemental screening and streamline exam readings on patients with dense breasts. Approximately 71% of cancers occur in dense breasts.1 According to studies across the U.S. and Europe, 40% of women2 and 70% of Asian women3 have dense breast tissue, making them four to six times more likely to receive a breast cancer diagnosis.4 Early d...

 PRESS RELEASE

GE HealthCare and NVIDIA reimagine diagnostic imaging with autonomous ...

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) today announced a collaboration with NVIDIA at GTC 2025, expanding the existing relationship between the two companies to focus on pioneering innovation in autonomous imaging, beginning with autonomous X-ray technologies and autonomous applications within ultrasound. GE HealthCare has been at the forefront of medical technology innovation with a series of “firsts” that date back more than a century, starting with the invention of its X-ray tube, followed by several others including the first handheld ultrasound, first 3D obstetr...

 PRESS RELEASE

GE HealthCare expands invasive cardiology solutions portfolio with Alt...

CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) today announced the launch of the AltiX AI.i edition of Mac-Lab™, CardioLab™ and ComboLab™. The AltiX AI.i editions are designed to improve the user experience, elevating workflow in the cardiac catheterization (cath) lab and supporting even the most complex electrophysiology (EP) procedures. These latest editions offer new features that can streamline workflow and enhance interoperability, while upholding strong cybersecurity standards. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) has nearly doubled over the past three decades, affecting more than 500 ...

 PRESS RELEASE

GE HealthCare Advances Its Cloud Strategy by Unveiling the Genesis Por...

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) today announced its new Genesis solutions, a portfolio of cloud enterprise imaging software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions. Four features will be offered when commercially released – edge, storage, vendor neutral archive and data migration.i These cloud solutions, are designed to help enhance healthcare organizations’ efficiency and precision, streamline workflows, and optimize the use of capital and IT resources. The growing volume and complexity of patient cases are putting increasing pressure on hospitals’ IT systems, driving the ne...

 PRESS RELEASE

GE HealthCare names new president and CEO, China

CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC), a leading global healthcare solutions provider, today announced that Yihao Zhang, president and CEO, China, will retire from the company effective July 1, 2025. Will Song, a Johnson & Johnson veteran for over 20 years, has been named GE HealthCare’s new president and CEO, China, and will join the company on April 1, 2025, ahead of leading the region starting July 1 following Yihao’s departure. Yihao’s planned retirement allowed GE HealthCare to purposefully identify and prepare a qualified successor in Will, an exceptional leader with ...

ResearchPool Subscriptions

Get the most out of your insights

Get in touch