Opto Acoustic Imaging: A New Modality in Breast Cancer Diagnostics

Eligible for 1.0 ARRT Category A CE credit by the AHRA

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

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In this session join Marc Inciardi, MD, Associate Professor of Radiology, Breast Imaging Section University of Kansas Health System, as he discusses how opto-acoustic imaging uses light, sound and artificial intelligence to better diagnose breast cancer by providing functional information in and around a mass. The learning objectives will include the benefits patients and clinicians receive from this novel technology that will streamline this care pathway reducing the need for many follow on exams and biopsies.

ICE Webinars would like to thank our sponsor, Seno Medical Instruments, Inc.Seno Medical Instruments, Inc. is a San Antonio, Texas-based medical imaging company committed to improving the efficiency – and reducing the complexity – of breast cancer diagnostics through its new modality: opto-acoustic imaging. Approved by the U.S. FDA in January 2021, with supplemental approval in June 2022, Seno’s Imagio® Breast Imaging System is a new modality combining light, sound, and integrated AI to provide information not previously available to the breast imager. The result is substantially improved confidence in diagnostic results that leads to real-time assessments, streamlined care pathways, and reductions in false positive biopsies. The company was recently recognized by Frost & Sullivan with its 2023 Enabling Technology Leadership award for its innovative approach to diagnostic imaging. To learn more about Seno Medical’s OA/US imaging technology and applications, visit www.SenoMedical.com.

Marc Inciardi, MD

Marc Inciardi, MD

Associate Professor of Radiology, Breast Imaging Section, University of Kansas Health System

Marc Inciardi, MD earned his medical degree and completed a diagnostic residency at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. He completed a fellowship at the Los Angeles County/USC Medical Center. After working 2 years as assistant professor of Radiology at the University of Missouri, Kansas City location, he joined a local private practice group in Kansas City, where he was instrumental in establishing the first community breast center in the Kansas City area. In 2005, he left private practice to assume a full-time breast radiology position at the University of Kansas Health System.

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