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Press Releases

UW–Madison To Perform the First U.S. Evaluation of GE Healthcare’s Photon Counting CT Technology with Deep Silicon Detectors

November 21, 2022

GE Healthcare’s design for Deep Silicon detectors for a photon counting CT (PCCT) is engineered with the goal of achieving breakthroughs in both CT spatial and spectral resolution at the same time and increasing imaging performance across care areas Researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison will kick off research scanning human subjects with GE Healthcare’s latest generation PCCT prototype in December 2022, representing the first U.S. clinical evaluation site with GE Healthcare’s pure silicon CT detector technology The project is the result of a close collaboration between Wisconsin-based healthcare, academia and medical technology providers

 

Waukesha, WI, November 21, 2022: Researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, the first U.S. clinical evaluation site for GE Healthcare’s industry-first silicon-based photon counting CT1, will begin human scanning using the device, which is engineered with Deep Silicon detectors with the goal of greatly enhancing imaging capabilities to help clinicians improve patient outcomes across oncology, cardiology, neurology, and other clinical CT applications.

 

The collaboration comes nearly one year after GE Healthcare announced its first clinical evaluation site at Karolinska Institute and MedTechLabs in Sweden. Since then, the company has made rapid progress in enhancing the developing technology, building a new system prototype to include:

A larger detector with the possible goal of enabling quicker scan times as well as expanding coverage; ECG-gated cardiac scan capabilities designed for coronary artery imaging; and Faster acquisition speed with the intent to reduce the likelihood of blurred images due to motion2.

 

“Photon counting CT has promise to embody the best of CT imaging available to date,” explains Dr. Meghan G Lubner, professor of radiology at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health. “This technology has the potential to expand the scope of current indications by combining refined energy resolved data, high spatial resolution, reduced noise and improved soft tissue contrast. We are working with GE Healthcare by testing their novel photon counting solutions in human subjects to assess issues ranging from improving commonly encountered CT image quality limitations to evaluating whether previously out of reach clinical questions can now feasibly be answered.”

 

Photon counting CT could potentially advance the capabilities of CT, including the visualization of minute details of organ structures, improved tissue characterization, more accurate material density measurement (or quantification) and lower radiation dose.

 

GE Healthcare is pursuing a unique approach to photon counting CT, which may enable higher spatial and spectral resolution at the same time, thanks to several advantages provided by Deep Silicon detectors, including: the detector’s material purity, innovative geometric design, and true multi-bin technologies for high performance spectral imaging. As such, the research being done at UW–Madison will assist GE Healthcare in better understanding the heights of these unique capabilities.

 

“Photon counting detectors push CT technology forward in two major ways: better spatial resolution and better contrast resolution,” shares Tim Szczykutowicz, Ph.D., associate professor radiology at the school. Szczykutowicz is also affiliated with the Departments of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering. “I think for CT, photon counting is undoubtedly the next big thing. We are a part of the process of evaluating and developing this unique approach to photon counting based on Deep Silicon technology.”

 

UW–Madison will facilitate human subject research and produce technical feedback to test and 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 determine how to best optimize photon counting CT with Deep Silicon detectors to enable better visualization and utilization.

 

“Innovation requires close collaboration between medical technology innovators and academia,” concludes Jean-Luc Procaccini, President & CEO, Molecular Imaging & Computed Tomography, GE Healthcare. “We are thrilled to deliver our newest prototype to our long-time collaborators at UW–Madison and UW Health. Together with UW, Karolinska Institute and MedTechLabs, we are advancing a cutting-edge technology with the potential to provide clinicians and patients with more information sooner – all with the goal of helping to improve patient outcomes.”

 

For more information on GE Healthcare’s unique approach to photon counting CT with Deep Silicon, visit gehealthcare.com.

About GE Healthcare:

 

GE Healthcare is the $17.7 billion healthcare business of GE (NYSE: GE). As a leading global medical technology, pharmaceutical diagnostics and digital solutions innovator, GE Healthcare enables clinicians to make faster, more informed decisions through intelligent devices, data analytics, applications and services, supported by its Edison intelligence platform. With over 100 years of healthcare industry experience and around 48,000 employees globally, the company operates at the center of an ecosystem working toward precision health, digitizing healthcare, helping drive productivity and improve outcomes for patients, providers, health systems and researchers around the world.

 

  1. 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.
  2. Compared to previous prototype 

This press release is GE HealthCare historical archive material. Any reference in these materials to GE HealthCare products or their uses may not reflect current medical knowledge or up to date documentation for the products. Do not rely upon this release as a source of information on the safety or effectiveness of the products or on the contents of any product label or manual. Please refer to the current product documentation, including product labels and manuals, for current product information.

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About GE HealthCare Technologies Inc.

GE HealthCare is a trusted partner and leading global healthcare solutions provider, innovating medical technology, pharmaceutical diagnostics, and integrated, cloud-first AI-enabled solutions, services and data analytics. We aim to make hospitals and health systems more efficient, clinicians more effective, therapies more precise, and patients healthier and happier. Serving patients and providers for more than 125 years, GE HealthCare is advancing personalized, connected and compassionate care, while simplifying the patient’s journey across care pathways. Together, our Imaging, Advanced Visualization Solutions, Patient Care Solutions and Pharmaceutical Diagnostics businesses help improve patient care from screening and diagnosis to therapy and monitoring. We are a $19.7 billion business with approximately 53,000 colleagues working to create a world where healthcare has no limits.

 

GE HealthCare is proud to be among 2025 Fortune World’s Most Admired Companies™.

 

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