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Sectra and NPIC collaboration expansion to help accelerate digital pathology across the U.K.

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | March 03, 2022 Health IT
Linköping, Sweden – March 3, 2022 –The National Pathology Imaging Co-operative (NPIC) is expanding the use of international medical imaging IT and cybersecurity company Sectra’s (STO: SECT B) pathology solution. This opens opportunities for NHS trusts throughout the UK to digitize pathology and improve patient diagnoses.

The expansion now taking place will help laboratories in different parts of the UK digitize their pathology services. Big wins are expected for patients and busy healthcare professionals. It is a result of a 5-year contract signed in October 2021 and is part of a multi-million pound NHS initiative that already spans six trusts.

Initially, it will involve providing support to more hospitals in the North of England, but the agreement will also allow NPIC to scale its approach and the Sectra technology to other hospitals across the country, as many more consider how to begin digital pathology initiatives and take advantage of emerging government funding. In addition, it will allow NPIC to create two new specialist digital pathology networks in paediatrics and sarcoma tissue cancers.
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NPIC is led by Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and NHS laboratories in the surrounding region that are now becoming amongst the most technologically advanced and interconnected anywhere in the world. Organizations involved are ending their reliance on microscopes by sharing digital images of patients’ tissue. In turn, the region will be able to send images to specialists more easily and embrace artificial intelligence to enhance how illnesses are diagnosed and managed.

Professor Darren Treanor, NPIC’s director, and a practising pathologist at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “Digital pathology is now a national priority. Many NHS hospitals want to take advantage of this powerful technology to deliver a better service for patients. With NPIC, we hope to provide a proven model, underpinned with advanced technology from Sectra, that will help many more hospitals quickly realize their ambitions and benefit from the groundwork we have already done.”

Basharat Hussain, deployment director at NPIC, added: “Our work may have begun with a regional focus, but we are moving to address some significant clinical priorities nationally in areas like paediatrics and sarcoma cancer, where pathology specialists are especially scarce. We have now identified a significantly bigger application for our programme. We have shown how digital pathology can work and we can help the rest of the NHS replicate and scale using our learnings, in order to get pathology digitized to support better patient care.”

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