Imaging IT

Keeping Pace with Volume: 7 Strategies from ASNR 2025

This week weary neuroradiologists descended upon the City of Brotherly Love for the annual meeting of the American Society of Neuroradiology (ASNR). The field is facing mounting pressure as increasing imaging volumes continue to outstrip radiologists’ capacity. 

Dealing with growing volume was a recurring theme throughout ASNR 2025, with a range of proposed solutions, including the seven strategies below:

  1. Acquisition automation for higher efficiency and reduced technical requirement: A talk by Lawrence Tanenbaum, MD, featured a number of AI solutions to ease technologist training requirements, including smart protocoling, automated patient positioning, one-touch exams without parameter adjustments, and on-device quality assurance and motion correction to cut down repeat exams.
  2. Accelerated acquisitions as the standard-of-care: Every manufacturer – from established vendors to emerging startups – showcased deep learning-based reconstruction. As Suzie Bash, MD, put it, “Deep learning reconstruction is becoming standard-of-care across the industry.
  3. Improving radiologist reading efficiency with AI and workflow management: A noticeable trend at ASNR 2025 was fewer talks focused solely on algorithm accuracy and more emphasis on how AI impacts reading efficiency. Accuracy remains critical, but adoption increasingly hinges on demonstrating workflow efficiency.
  4. Streamlining new algorithm rollout using integrated platforms: In a session on AI adoption and evaluation, Reza Forghani, MD, PhD, called for increased use of integrated platforms to allow for easier algorithm deployment, validation, and monitoring.
  5. Rising reliance on international medical graduates (IMGs): Mina Hesami, MD, presented on the rising contribution of IMGs to US radiology, noting a steady increase in the proportion of residency slots, fellowships, and leadership roles held by international graduates – with radiology seeing faster growth than most other medical specialties.
  6. Expanding the radiology workforce with mid-level providers: Another proposed strategy is offloading specific tasks to mid-level providers. While still controversial in radiology, this model is gaining traction in response to workforce shortages.
  7. Sustainability by reducing emissions and environmental impact: Several ASNR sessions addressed environmental sustainability. From simply turning off idle scanners to using AI to reduce contrast doses, radiologists are beginning to reckon with the environmental impact of rising scan volumes.

The Takeaway

The sessions at ASNR 2025 indicate that while there’s a lot of buzz around AI, radiologists are considering every tool at their disposal to keep up with rising imaging volumes. AI will play a role, but likely won’t be sufficient alone to keep up with increasing volumes alone.

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