MedCity News November 7, 2025
Derek Mathers

Deploying AI-driven segmentation at an enterprise level goes beyond operational efficiency. It signals a commitment to pioneering the next era of precision healthcare.

Patient-specific surgical planning, powered by 3D visualization, has proven transformative for surgical precision and patient outcomes. Until recently, hospitals faced a significant barrier to scaling adoption: the absence of dedicated reimbursement for the substantial time, cost, and expertise required to generate accurate 3D visualizations of patient anatomy. Consequently, hospitals were unable to fully recoup their investments in digital, volumetric patient anatomy representations.

This reimbursement gap has slowed broader adoption of patient-specific medical devices, as the segmentation of CT or MRI scans represents the foundational step toward downstream applications, such as personalized device manufacturing, targeted drug delivery, surgical...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Digital Health, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Technology
The Medical Futurist’s 100 Digital Health And AI Companies Of 2026
The $20B Opportunity: Transforming Unused Health Data into a Strategic Asset
ICT&health World Conference: meeting and sharing information
‘It really does take a village to innovate in healthcare’
Canada: Acute Care EHR & Digital Health 2026-What's Changing Now in Adoption, Implementation, Selection and Satisfaction - Black Book Research

Share Article