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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06803420
NA

AI-powered Portable MRI Abnormality Detection

Sponsor: King's College Hospital NHS Trust

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study aims to test a new AI-powered portable MRI scanner that can quickly identify whether a brain scan is normal or abnormal. Currently, standard MRI scans are expensive and have long waiting times. Our goal is to see if a smaller, cheaper, and more accessible MRI scanner-combined with artificial intelligence (AI)-can help doctors identify abnormalities faster and improve patient care. We will invite patients from King's College Hospital (KCH) who are already having a standard MRI scan. They will be asked to have an extra scan using the portable MRI, which takes about 60 minutes. The AI tool will then analyse these scans and compare its results to those of expert radiologists. By the end of the study, we hope to prove whether portable MRI with AI can be used in hospitals and GP clinics, making brain scans more accessible, reducing wait times, and helping doctors prioritise urgent cases. This study is funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC) and has been approved by UK research ethics committees.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

400

Start Date

2025-02-01

Completion Date

2027-10

Last Updated

2025-01-31

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

DEVICE

Portable, ultra-low-field MRI scanner

This study evaluates a portable, ultra-low-field MRI scanner (the Hyperfine Swoop) combined with artificial intelligence (AI) to detect brain abnormalities. Patients undergoing a standard brain MRI scan will be invited to have an additional portable MRI scan within 30 days of their clinical scan. The portable MRI scan will take approximately 60 minutes, using multiple imaging sequences, including T2-weighted scans. The AI system will then analyse the portable MRI images and categorise them as "normal" or "abnormal". The results will be compared with expert neuroradiologist reports from standard MRI scans to validate accuracy. This intervention aims to assess whether portable MRI with AI can provide a low-cost, accessible alternative to standard MRI, potentially improving triage and reducing waiting times for patients requiring urgent brain imaging.