MedImaging

Download Mobile App
Recent News Radiography MRI Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine General/Advanced Imaging Imaging IT Industry News

World’s First and Only Portable PET Scanner Awarded FDA Clearance

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 20 Aug 2021
Print article
Image: BBX-PET scanner (Photo courtesy of Prescient Imaging LLC)
Image: BBX-PET scanner (Photo courtesy of Prescient Imaging LLC)
The world’s first and only portable positron emission tomography (PET) scanner has been granted 510k FDA clearance.

The portable PET scanner named BBX-PET from Prescient Imaging LLC (Hawthorne, CA, USA) is the first and only portable PET scanner that is cleared for use by the US Federal Food and Drug Administration. The BBX is a portable PET scanner for imaging of breast, brain, and extremities. Its gantry can move up to allow brain imaging while the patient is seated. It can also move down to image the breast without compression, while a patient is lying on a biopsy table or rotate and allow imaging the breast, hand, or leg in a seated position.

The most important feature of BBX-PET scanners is that they are portable and can be wheeled to the point-of-care in a physician’s office, a hospital room, ER, OR, or nursing homes. Because the organ-specific scanner is approximately 300 lb, it can easily be transported to deliver point-of-care molecular imaging. The logistical advantage of BBX-PET will greatly expand the availability of this vital imaging modality.

“BBX-PET scanner is intended to obtain positron emission tomography (PET) images of parts of the human body that fit in the patient aperture (e.g., head) to detect abnormal patterns of distribution of radioactivity after injection of a positron-emitting radiopharmaceutical. This information can assist in research, diagnosis, therapeutic planning, and therapeutic outcome assessment,” said Dr. Farhad Daghighian, CEO and co-founder of Prescient Imaging LLC. “We expect our scanners provide unparalleled opportunities for growth in neurology, geriatric psychiatry, and radiation oncology centers. In addition, BBX-PET scanners provide higher resolution than conventional PET scanners and at a lower cost.”

“PET imaging of the brain is essential to the accurate diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease”, according to Michael Rafii MD, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Neurology at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California. “As new therapeutics become available for the treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease, accurate diagnosis will be critical before initiation of any disease-modifying therapy.”

Related Links:
Prescient Imaging LLC

Gold Member
Solid State Kv/Dose Multi-Sensor
AGMS-DM+
Thyroid Shield
Standard Thyroid Shield
Brachytherapy Planning System
Oncentra Brachy
Ultrasound System
Acclarix AX9

Print article

Channels

Ultrasound

view channel
Image: CAM figures of testing images (Photo courtesy of SPJ; DOI:10.34133/research.0319)

Diagnostic System Automatically Analyzes TTE Images to Identify Congenital Heart Disease

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is one of the most prevalent congenital anomalies worldwide, presenting substantial health and financial challenges for affected patients. Early detection and treatment of... Read more

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: Whole-body maximum-intensity projections over time after [68Ga]Ga-DPI-4452 administration (Photo courtesy of SNMMI)

New PET Agent Rapidly and Accurately Visualizes Lesions in Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma Patients

Clear cell renal cell cancer (ccRCC) represents 70-80% of renal cell carcinoma cases. While localized disease can be effectively treated with surgery and ablative therapies, one-third of patients either... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more