News | Mammography | October 02, 2025

Research suggests AI may help identify more aggressive breast cancers and perform comparably to experts in breast cancer screening

New Data on AI-Powered Mammography Technology Presented at European Breast Imaging Meeting

Sept. 26, 2025 — Data from two groundbreaking studies evaluating the performance of Hologic’s artificial intelligence (AI)-powered mammography technology was presented recently at the European Society of Breast Imaging (EUSOBI) Annual Scientific Meeting in Aberdeen, Scotland.

“These results underscore AI’s ability to make breast cancer screening more accurate and efficient, and its potential to provide valuable insights about each patient’s unique tumor biology,” said Mark Horvath, President, Breast and Skeletal Health Solutions at Hologic. “We’re proud to work with top researchers around the world to continue to advance this technology and improve care for women everywhere.”

The first study, conducted at Massachusetts General Hospital in the U.S., aimed to evaluate whether AI scores on 3D mammography (digital breast tomosynthesis) screening exams are associated with tumor characteristics, including histologic grade and lymph node status. Researchers retrospectively analyzed approximately 600 exams performed between 2016 and 2019 using Hologic’s Genius AI® Detection 2.0 mammography solution. All cases were biopsy-proven cancers; 80% were invasive and 20% were ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).

To indicate the likelihood that breast cancer is present, the Genius AI Detection technology assigns a score to each suspicious lesion on an exam and then takes all the scores together to create an overall “case score.” A score between 51% and 75% corresponds to a 1 in 61 likelihood of cancer, while a case score between 76% and 100% corresponds to a 1 in 27 likelihood. In the study, AI case scores were higher for higher-grade tumors and node-positive cancers — features associated with more aggressive disease.

“AI is quickly becoming a valuable second set of eyes for radiologists, helping to flag cancers sooner, and our study suggests an added benefit of identifying those that are more likely to be aggressive,” said Dr. Manisha Bahl, M.D., MPH, FSBI, Associate Medical Director of Quality at Mass General Brigham and Associate Professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School, who will be presenting the results at EUSOBI. “These findings are noteworthy because, for patients with more aggressive cancers, earlier detection allows treatment to begin sooner, which can improve clinical outcomes.”

The second study, presented by Professor Yan Chen, Ph.D., Chair of Digital Screening and Head of the Digital Cancer Screening Research Group at the University of Nottingham, UK, tested how well Hologic’s Genius AI Detection solution performed compared with radiologists. In this study, 108 radiologists from the UK and U.S. reviewed 75 clinically challenging breast cancer cases. The AI system also read the same cases.

The AI technology demonstrated similar performance to radiologists in finding cancers, with higher sensitivity but lower specificity. While the study is ongoing, these early results suggest AI could be a useful tool in helping radiologists diagnose breast cancer early. In many countries, each mammogram is checked by two radiologists and workforce shortages can make this difficult. These findings show AI’s potential to help fill this gap.

In addition to its AI-powered technologies, Hologicshowcased its latest breast surgery innovations at EUSOBI, including the next-generation Sentimag Gen 3 device for tumor localization and breast cancer staging. The product was developed by UK-based acquisition Endomag and was launched in Europe earlier this year.

Hologic will host multiple education sessions and workshops throughout the congress.

To learn more, visit www.hologic.com.


Related Content

News | Imaging Software Development

June 10, 2026 — DeepHealth, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of RadNet, has launched Reporting Pro, an AI-powered ...

Time June 12, 2026
arrow
News | Women's Health

June 2, 2026 — Results of an American College of Radiology-managed retrospective study involving 110,000 women presented ...

Time June 02, 2026
arrow
News | Radiopharmaceuticals and Tracers

May 27, 2026 — Subtle Medical has received FDA clearance for its SubtleHD (PET), the company's next-generation AI ...

Time May 27, 2026
arrow
News | FDA

May 19, 2026 — DeepHealth has received the CE Mark for the Brain Health and Brain Age solutions within its Neuro Suite ...

Time May 26, 2026
arrow
News | Cardiac Imaging

May 21, 2026 — A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic’s ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News | X-Ray

May 21, 2026 — RADIN Health and AZmed have announced the expansion of their strategic partnership and enhance radiology ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News

May 21, 2026 – Artera, the developer of multimodal artificial intelligence (MMAI)-based prognostic and predictive cancer ...

Time May 22, 2026
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

May 7, 2026 — Roche has entered into a definitive merger agreement to acquire PathAI, a U.S.-based company in digital ...

Time May 21, 2026
arrow
News | Computed Tomography (CT)

May 12, 2026 – Bracco Imaging S.p.A. has purchased a mobile photon-counting CT scanner from MARS Bioimaging to support ...

Time May 20, 2026
arrow
Feature | Enterprise Imaging | Kyle Hardner

For radiology departments, the imbalance between surging imaging volume and a shortage of trained radiologists is taking ...

Time May 20, 2026
arrow
Subscribe Now