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Medical Imaging

The UCL Centre for Medical Imaging (CMI) is a multidisciplinary group focusing on medical / clinical imaging. Our portfolio spans cutting-edge translational "first in (hu)man" interventions right through to leading multi-centre trials of emerging and established imaging techniques within the NHS that change clinical practice. We have an extensive track record of achieving substantial competitive research funding and publishing the results in high-impact indexed journals.

Our work 

We aim to keep the UK at the forefront of clinical imaging research worldwide so that we can improve patient outcomes. CMI is a partnership between UCL and University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (UCLH), and benefits from the interface between world-leading basic science research and expert clinical groups.

Need support with a trial?

Are you looking for support with a trial that involves imaging? Our Research Imaging Organisation (RIO) is made up of an experienced team of medical imaging experts specialising in the design and implementation of imaging trials. We provide a comprehensive infrastructure to support researchers with designing and managing trials of novel imaging techniques or trials where the primary outcome is imaging dependent.

Find out more

A scientist reviews some imaging results on a monitor screen

Facilities

The UCL Centre for Medical Imaging has access to multiple state-of-the-art imaging platforms, both experimental (e.g. hyperpolarised MRI) and established (e.g. 3T MRI). Multiple platforms are dedicated to research across multiple sites.

We manage a 3T Philips Ingenia MR scanner located in the MacMillan Cancer Centre. This scanner has paid-for time available to develop new techniques and sequences for both cancer and non-cancer applications.

We also have collaborations across UCL and UCLH with imaging facilities that include:

  • a Siemens mMR biograph PET-MR scanner
  • Philips and Siemens 1.5T and 3T MR scanners
  • a 1.5T Philips Ingenia Ambition scanner associated with the newly opened Proton Beam Therapy centre.

Booking enquiries for the Ingenia MR scanner

Please contact:

For MR image reconstruction, along with colleagues at the UCL Institute of Neurology, we have access to the Gyrotools ReconFrame software and vendor-specific reconstruction code. We also are co-investigators on the EPSRC-funded SyneRBI reconstruction project.

Image analysis within CMI uses a variety of tools including OsiriX and Horos, MIM and many bespoke MATLAB packages. We work closely with colleagues in the UCL Centre for Medical Image Computing and the SME Motilent.


Our experts

The UCL Centre for Medical Imaging comprises around 45 research staff, clinical radiologists, non-clinical basic scientists, and support staff, including research nurses, radiographers, and administration. Many hold senior positions within international societies and clinical consensus groups. We have two NIHR Senior Investigators, an NIHR Research Professor and two members of staff who are FMedSci. We have a dedicated Imaging Trials group and access to the UCLH NIHR Biomedical Research Centre.

Shonit Punwani portrait

Prof. Shonit Punwani (Head)
NIHR Research Professor

Prof. Steve Halligan

Prof. Steve Halligan
Gastrointestinal Radiology

Professor Stuart Taylor

Prof. Stuart Taylor
NIHR National Speciality Lead

Margaret Hall-Craggs portrait

Prof. Margaret Hall-Craggs
Medical Imaging

Prof. Sue Mallett

Prof. Sue Mallett
Diagnostic Medical Statistics 

Professor David Atkinson

Prof. David Atkinson
Imaging in Medicine

Bandula Steven portrait

Dr Steve Bandula
Hon. Associate Professor

Dr Harbir Sidhu

Dr Harbir Sidhu
Hon. Radiologist

Dr Tim Bray

Dr Timothy Bray
Honorary Clinical Lecturer

Dr Thomas Wagner

Dr Thomas Wagner
Principal Research Fellow


Centre Management | Administration
  • Ms Ingrid Green | CMI Operations Manager
  • Mr Philip Ryan | Lead Contracts Manager
Researchers
  • Dr Richard Hesketh | NIHR Clinical Lecturer
  • Dr Naomi Sakai | NIHR Clinical Lecturer
  • Ms Fiona Gong | HP Programme Manager
  • Dr Rafat Chowdhury | Postdoctoral Researcher
  • Dr Lorna Smith | Senior Research Radiographer
  • Dr Tarek Al-Hammouri | Clinical Research Fellow
  • Dr Manju Mathew | Research Histopathologist
  • Dr Adam Retter | Clinical Researcher / PhD Student
  • Dr Natasha Thorley | Clinical Researcher / PhD Student
  • Mr Max Bullock | PhD Student
  • Ms Chloe Dennis | Research Assistant
  • Dr Shankar Kumar | Clinical PhD Student (Medical Imaging)
  • Dr Maira Hameed | Consultant Radiologist | PhD Student (Medical Imaging)
  • Dr Manil Chouhan | Honorary Senior Research Associate
  • Dr Giorgio Brembilla | Honorary Clinical Fellow
  • Dr Conrad Von Stempel | Consultant Radiologist / PhD Student (Medical Imaging)
  • Dr Louis Dwyer-Hemmings | Honorary Research Fellow
Medical Statistics
  • Dr Busola Adebusoye | Medical Statistician
  • Mr Tom Parry | Research Assistant / NIHR Fellow PhD Student
  • Miss Jude Holmes | Research Assistant / PhD Student
Clinical Trials Unit
  • Ms Chris Brew-Graves | CTU Director of Operations / Programme Manager | c.brew-graves@ucl.ac.uk
  • Dr Ingrid Potyka | Senior Clinical Trial Manager
  • Mrs Rosemary Clow | Clinical Trials Manager
  • Mr Nick Roberts | Clinical Trials Manager
  • Miss Orla Bachelor | Clinical Trials Manager
  • Miss Balqiisa Issa | Associate Clinical Trials Manager
  • Ms Ayisato (Aisha) Akilo | Associate Clinical Trials Manager
RIO CoreLab
  • Dr Penny Cristinacce | Lead, RIO CoreLab | p.cristinacce@ucl.ac.uk
  • Mr Alistair Lamb | Research Assistant / PhD Student
  • Miss Julia Emily Markus | Senior Research Radiographer
  • Ms Sumandeep Kaur | UCL Senior Research Radiographer
RIO Implementation Team
  • Ms Teresita Beeston | Lead, RIO Implementation Team | teresita.beeston@nhs.net
  • Miss Katerina Soteriou | Lead Imaging Trials Practitioner
  • Miss Elizabeth Isaac | Lead Imagine Trials Practitioner
  • Mr Joey Clemente | Senior Research Practitioner
  • Mr Juel Tuazon | Senior Research Nurse
  • Ms Antonia Yeung | Senior Research Practitioner
  • James Pratt | Senior Research Practitioner
  • Michelle Berin | Clinical Research Nurse
  • Frelyn Ocampo | Clinical Research Nurse
  • Neela Ramchurn | Research Study Coordinator
  • Almae Rosal | Research Imaging Activity Coordinator
  • Janus Bulawan | Research Support Worker
  • Marium Ahmed | Research Study Support Administrator

Selected Publications

  1. Taylor SA, Mallett S, Bhatnagar G ... Plumb AA, Pollok RC, Punwani S ... Halligan S; METRIC study investigators (2018). Diagnostic accuracy of magnetic resonance enterography and small bowel ultrasound for the extent and activity of newly diagnosed and relapsed Crohn's disease (METRIC): a multicentre trial. Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2018 Aug;3(8): 548-558.

  2. Taylor SA, Mallett S, Beare S ... Punwani S, Quinn L ... Halligan S; Streamline investigators (2019). Diagnostic accuracy of whole-body MRI versus standard imaging pathways for metastatic disease in newly diagnosed colorectal cancer: the prospective Streamline C trial. Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2019 Jul;4(7): 529-537.

  3. Singh S, Rogers H, Kanber B ... Atkinson D, Moore CM, Whitaker HC, Alexander DC, Panagiotaki E, Punwani S (2022). Avoiding Unnecessary Biopsy after Multiparametric Prostate MRI with VERDICT Analysis: The INNOVATE Study. Radiology. 2022 Dec;305(3): 623-630.

  1. Taylor SA, Mallett S, Ball S ... Punwani S, Quinn L ... Halligan S; Streamline investigators (2019). Diagnostic accuracy of whole-body MRI versus standard imaging pathways for metastatic disease in newly diagnosed non-small-cell lung cancer: the prospective Streamline L trial. Lancet Respir Med. 2019 Jun;7(6): 523-532.

  2. Halligan S, Wooldrage K, Dadswell E  ... SIGGAR investigators (2013). Computed tomographic colonography versus barium enema for diagnosis of colorectal cancer or large polyps in symptomatic patients (SIGGAR): a multicentre randomised trial. Lancet. 2013 Apr 6;381(9873): 1185-93.

  3. Atkin W, Dadswell E, Wooldrage K ... Halligan S; SIGGAR investigators (2013). Computed tomographic colonography versus colonoscopy for investigation of patients with symptoms suggestive of colorectal cancer (SIGGAR): a multicentre randomised trial. Lancet. 2013 Apr 6;381(9873): 1194-202.


Funding and Partnerships

The National Cancer Imaging Translational Accelerator (NCITA), funded by CRUK, is a UK medical imaging consortium which includes nine leading UK medical imaging institutions. NCITA provides UK clinical researchers with infrastructure support for multicentre clinical imaging studies including access to world-class clinical imaging facilities and expertise, quality assurance / quality support and repository data management service, including artificial intelligence (AI) tools and ongoing training opportunities.

Logo for NCITA: the National Cancer Imaging Translational Accelerator

The aims are to accelerate the standardisation and translation of cancer imaging biomarkers for clinical use and develop a robust imaging biomarker certification process to revolutionise the speed and accuracy of cancer diagnosis, tumour classification and patient response to treatment.

Professor Shonit Punwani is chair of the NCITA consortium. He is also the project lead on the NCITA Exemplar, which aims to progress the utility of multiparametric-MRI for adoption by the NHS through a novel multiparametric-MRI repository and the development of artificial image analysis tools. NCITA leaders work closely with the CRUK Commercial Partnerships team to ensure that new discoveries arising from NCITA’s exemplary projects and other studies supported by CRUK become available to people with cancer.

Funders

Logo for Cancer Research UK. A large mosaic C of blue and pink circles plus dark blue text.

Logo for ACED: International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection

Logo for Prostate Cancer UK

Logo for the NIHR UCLH Biomedical Research Centre

Logo for the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)

Logo for UKRI Innovate UK (navy / pink)

The logo for the URKI Medical Research Council. A quadrilateral, with 'UKRI' over navy on the left, and two teal portions on the right.

Logo for the Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research

Logo for the John Black Charitable Foundation

Commercial Partners

Logo for Gold Standard Phantoms

Logo for iCAD

Logo for Biotronics3D

Logo for Quibim

Logo for Blue Earth Therapeutics

 

Recent grants

Professor Steve Halligan

Total amount of funding won by Professor Halligan since 2006: £3.9 million as a PI and £18.9 million as a co-applicant.

As Chief Investigator

Prognostic model of ventral hernia recurrence (2017)

  • Funder NIHR RfPB 
  • Duration: 24 months
  • Award: £145,926

Biomarkers in Crohns disease (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR HTA
  • Duration: 18 months
  • Award: £248,773

Co-applicant

MRC CARP Award (2019)

  • Funder: MRC
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £254,813

Motility in Crohn's Disease (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR EME
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £900,437

METRIC Extension (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR HTA
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £347,882

PERFECTS (2016)

  • Funder: St. Mark's Charity
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £405,760

MROC (2015)

  • Funder: NIHR HTA
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £1,270,660

Arts Award (2015)

  • Funder: Wellcome Trust
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £39,870
Professor Stuart Taylor

Total amount of funding won by Professor Taylor since 2015: £3.6 million as a principal investigator, £1.25 million as a co-investigor and £3.8 million as a co-applicant.

Clinical Principal Investigator

Novel intestinal motility imaging to identify prodromal Parkinson disease and response to systemic therapy for synucleinopathy (2022)

  • Funder: Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinsons Research
  • Duration:36 months
  • Award: £361,156.73

Quantitative reporting In Crohn's Disease: maximising available MRI data to better direct patient treatment, speed up treatment decisions and improve healthcare outcomes 2020-2023 (academic lead) (2020)

  • Funder: Innovate UK
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £1,574,006

Real World Evidence Driving Changes in Crohn’s Disease Management Using Quantitative Imaging Analysis (2020)

  • Funder: NIHR i41
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £1,063,499

Evaluation of Crohn's disease activity with MRI-adding value through quantitative assessment of intestinal motility (2017)

  • Funder: NIHR i41
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £685,467

Co-Clinical Investigator

MRI enterography as a predictor of disabling disease in newly diagnosed Crohn's disease (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR HTA
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: £358,183

Small bowel motility quantified by cine MRI as a predictor of response to biological therapy (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR EME
  • Duration: 12 months
  • Award: £896,292

Co-Applicant

Taking TransiCap to Market - testing of an MRI based method of assessing Gut transit. Patients ingest MRI compatible markers. An MRI is performed 3 days after and the position of the markers gives an indication of gut transit time (MAGIC3) (2024)

  • Funder: NIHR EME
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £91,940.31

Assessment of gut transit in paediatric constipation without ionizing radiation: Magnetic Resonance Imaging transit minicapsules and methods 2 (MAGIC2) (2019)

  • Funder: NIHR EME
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £1,224,841

Reclassifying constipation using MRI and high-resolution manometry (2016)

  • Funder: MRC
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £1,225,971

MROC (2015)

  • Funder: NIHR HTA
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £1,270,660
Professor Shonit Punwani

Total amount of funding won by Professor Punwani since 2015 is £10.6 million as a principal investigator and £1.25 million as a co-investigator.

Principal Investigator

Smarter identification and management of Early prostate cancer: improving Lives and End outcomes through Clinical Translation of novel magnetic resonance imaging (SELECT) (2024)

  • Funder: NIHR Research Professorship 
  • Duration: 4 years
  • Award: £2,000,000

Addressing the Base error Impeding the Development of biomarkers for Early detection (ABIDE) (2024)

  • Funder: ACED/CRUK     
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £1,003,293.30

Development and validation of a novel comprehensive solution for the calibration of hyperpolarized metabolic magnetic resonance imaging (CHARM) (2024)

  • Funder: UKRI
  • Duration: 18 months
  • Award: £1,151,440

Luminal index MRI identification of treatment critical prostate cancer (LIMIT PCa)

  • Funder: CRUK
  • Duration: 4 years
  • Award: £613,876

Comparing bio-parametric MRI to multi-parametric MRI in the diagnosis of clinically significant prostate (PRIME) (2021)

  • Funder: PCUK
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £66,468

Comparison of diagnostic accuracy of luminal index and multi-parametric MRI for accelerated detection of significant prostate cancer (CLIMATE) (2020)

  • Funder: John Black 
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: £763,428.73

Novel microstructural (VERDICT and T2 mapping) and metabolic (hyperpolarised 13C-Pyruvate) MR in diagnosis, risk-stratification and treatment response assessment of prostate cancer (2018)

  • Funder: CRUK
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: £2,321,544.59

Developing MRI Magnetic Susceptibility-Based Cancer Oxygenation Mapping (SBCOM) and Investigating its Clinical Potential to Measure Hypoxia in Prostrate Cancer (PCa) (2018)

  • Funder: CRUK
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £450,000

Establishment of BRC Imaging Trial Unit (2017)

  • Funder: NIHR
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: £800,000

BBSRC PhD Case Studentship (2017)

  • Funder: BBSRC
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £100,000

Standardisation of Prostate Multi-parametric MRI across UCL Partners (2016)

  • Funder: London Cancer
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £120,000

Imaging Trial Support Funding (2016)

  • Funder: UCLH
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £400,000

Establishment of Hyperpolariser Probe GMP Facility (2016)

  • Funder: NIHR
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £254,000

CombIning advaNces in imagiNg with biOmarkers for improVed diagnosis of Aggressive prosTate cancer (INNOVATE) (2015)

  • Funder: Prostate Cancer UK
  • Duration: 48 months
  • Award: £534,000

Co-Investigator

National Prostate Cancer Screening Programme (Transform) (2024)

  • Funder: CRUK and John Block Foundation 
  • Duration: 5 years 
  • Award: £3,700,000

Learning MRI and histology image mappings for cancer diagnosis and prognosis (2018)

  • Funder: EPSRC
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £774,000

The exploitation of a novel image-based risk stratification tool in early prostate cancer - the Re-IMAGINE Consortium (2018)

  • Funder: MRC
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: £6,300,000

Development and evaluation of machine learning methods in whole body magnetic resonance imaging with diffusion weighted imaging for staging of patients with cancer. (MAchine Learning In whole Body Oncology, MALIBO) (2015)

  • Funder: NIHR EME
  • Duration: 36 months
  • Award: £578,000

GLINT - developing Gluco-CEST MRI (2015)

  • Funder: Horizon 2020
  • Duration: 60 months
  • Award: €6,400,000
Professor Margaret Hall-Craggs

Principal Investigator

Imaging Biomarkers of Inflammation in Adolescents: Development and Technical Validation (2016)

  • Funder: UCLH Fast Track Grant
  • Duration: 12 months
  • Award: £28,500

Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (2015)

  • Funder: Radiology Research Trust
  • Duration: 24 months
  • Award: £6,000

Validation of an objective biomarker of inflammation of the sacroiliac joints in adolescents with juvenile idiopathic arthritis to quantify treatment response (2015)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC
  • Duration: 18 months
  • Award: £75,395
Dr Timothy Bray

Principal Investigator

AI-powered qMRI for inflammation imaging (2023)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC Grant (Healthcare Engineering & Imaging)
  • Award: £49,887

AI-powered qMRI for inflammation imaging (2023)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC Grant (Inflammation, Immunotherapeutics and Infection): 
  • Award: £25,000

Optimisation of a multiparametric quantitative MRI tool for assessment of bone and joint health in inflammatory diseases (2019)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC Grant (Healthcare Engineering & Imaging)
  • Award: £19,978

Optimisation of a multiparametric quantitative MRI tool for assessment of bone and joint health in inflammatory diseases (2019)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC Grant (Inflammation, Immunity and Immunotherapeutics)
  • Award: £58,542

Co-Investigator

NIHR Programme Grant for Applied Research - Lead for MRI Acquisition, Curation and Analysis (2023)

  • Funder: NIHR
  • Award: £2,519,857

Functional and microstructural imaging of renal tumours (2023)

  • Funder: UCLH BRC Grant (Healthcare Engineering & Imaging)
  • Award: £49,750

Quantitative perfusion imaging in peripheral arterial disease (QPiPAD) (2022)

  • Funder: Royal College of Radiologists Seed Grant (awarded to my PhD student Conrad von Stempel)
  • Award: £24,500

Next event: 'How to interpret the news'

Join us for this NIHR Patient and Public Involvement Event.

Date

13 November 2024, 2pm-4pm

Venue

UCL Centre for Medical Imaging
2nd Floor, Charles Bell House
43-45 Foley Street
London
W1W 7TS

Charles Bell House, UCL

Moodle course on Practical MATLAB

A Moodle course on Practical MATLAB for Research is available to UCL staff and students (no enrolment key needed).

MediaCentral Widget Placeholderhttps://mediacentral.ucl.ac.uk/Player/c5I4h2H9

Setting up diagnostic studies

Professor Sue Mallett has produced a set of medical statistic-based videos for setting up diagnostic studies.

YouTube Widget Placeholderhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQpJ8WUtz-w&list=PLRsuCERrr4S9ziAv8cRmku...

RCR: CRASH! (Clinical Radiology Academics Speaking Honestly)

The second episode of the RCR: Crash! podcast is about radiologists that are currently or have recently been engaged in a PhD as part of their academic development. We find out what this experience has brought them (both expected and unexpected), and how they have balanced all this with their clinical career. Featuring Dr Tim Bray.

Listen to the podcast

Logo for RCR: Crash! podcast

Contact details

Email

cmi-admin@ucl.ac.uk

Postal Address

UCL Centre for Medical Imaging
2nd Floor, Charles Bell House
43-45 Foley Street
London, W1W 7TS

Follow us on X / Twitter: @CMI_UCL