Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust has awarded a contract via a negotiated procedure without prior publication for the provision of a portable low-field (0.064 Tesla) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system. The contract will also include associated peripherals, training, support and maintenance services for a period of five (5) years.
Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust (the "Trust") has awarded a contract for the provision of a portable low-field (0.064 Tesla) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system. The contract will also include associated peripherals, training, support and maintenance services for a period of five (5) years commencing on the date of delivery of the products to the agreed final shipping location.
The MRI scanner will be used for the purpose of accelerating and developing local place-based neuroimaging research into the process of assessment and diagnosis of dementia, in which timely access to neuroimaging is frequently a rate-limiting step. The scanner will also be available for researchers addressing other mental health disorders, such as research aligned to the new Kent Complex Psychosis Service and investigation of non-dementia mental illness in older and younger adults.
A key focus will be to aid the development of new AI algorithms in the assessment of structural change in dementia and cognitive decline – to decrease the need for high field MRI brain assessment in specialist centres and avoid the associated restrictive environment.
In order to support the its research objectives, the Trust required a system which fulfilled the following requirements:
• Approved for commercial sale in the UK (UKCA marked);
• Small and highly portable design in order to fit through doorways and elevators, and to provide ease of manoeuvrability;
• Magnetic configuration to enable researchers to work safely with participants during testing;
• Ability to be powered through standard electrical outlets;
• Low power consumption to reduce running costs;
• Open design to reduce participant anxiety; and
• Controlled through portable user-friendly wireless device (e.g. tablet).