NCIP/national-biomedical-image-archive

Name: national-biomedical-image-archive

Owner: National Cancer Informatics Program

Description: The National Biomedical Imaging Archive (NBIA) is a free and open source service and software application that enables users to securely store, search, and download diagnostic medical images, providing a searchable national repository integrating in vivo cancer images with clinical and genomic data. Using role-based security, NBIA provides web-based access to de-identified DICOM images, image markup, annotations, and rich meta data.

Created: 2013-04-18 16:12:33.0

Updated: 2017-11-04 22:19:35.0

Pushed: 2017-01-10 20:29:37.0

Homepage:

Size: 5946406

Language: Java

GitHub Committers

UserMost Recent Commit# Commits
snampall2013-06-04 15:51:04.02
sgustaf2016-08-10 12:03:58.0290
vrushalinikte2014-04-16 14:31:35.0275
panq2016-09-23 21:23:24.0382
Yogesh Prasai2014-10-09 21:19:44.0100
zhoujim2011-04-27 19:08:39.0104
corakwue-Ellumen2016-06-20 05:44:11.028

Other Committers

UserEmailMost Recent Commit# Commits
chinwe.orakwuechinwe.orakwue@ell0000833.ellumen.local2016-06-30 14:45:09.02
unknownniktevv@nci-01874585.nci.nih.gov2014-04-07 19:02:28.019
panqpanq@nci-01874582.nci.nih.gov2015-04-29 23:46:12.052
panqpanq@nci-01874582.nci.nih.gov2015-04-29 23:46:12.052
Panpanq@nih.gov2016-06-30 20:04:15.01
unknownprasaiyk@nci-01874529.nci.nih.gov2014-10-06 18:12:14.05
Yogesh Prasaiprasaiyk@nih.gov2014-02-14 18:13:33.03
sgustafscott.gustafson@ellarch1.ellumen.local2014-10-28 08:51:18.0268
sgustafscott.gustafson@ellarch1.ellumen.local2014-10-28 08:51:18.0268
Scott Gustafsonscott.gustafson@nih.gov2013-04-04 17:17:41.031
Thiagarajan Prakashthiagarajan.prakash@nih.gov2011-04-15 17:24:07.023
phungqhunknown2011-01-11 00:48:00.03
phungqhunknown2011-01-11 00:48:00.03
phungqhunknown2011-01-11 00:48:00.03
phungqhunknown2011-01-11 00:48:00.03

README

Welcome to the National Biomedical Image Archive Project!

The National Biomedical Imaging Archive (NBIA) is a free and open source service and software application that enables users to securely store, search, and download diagnostic medical images, providing a searchable national repository integrating in vivo cancer images with clinical and genomic data. Using role-based security, NBIA provides web-based access to de-identified DICOM images, image markup, annotations, and rich meta data. The NBIA download package is a ZIP package that includes the NBIA application, supporting libraries, the RSNA MIRC application (with NBIA modifications), documentation, and a sample NBIA database. A web-based visualization and annotation tool, I-Response, is available to users of the NCI NBIA instance.

Along with the Clinical Trial Processor software from the Radiological Society of North America, NBIA supports customized de-identification of images. NBIA is able to integrate with other imaging applications to cull various data types, such as image annotations, clinical data, genomic data, and other research files, such as RT objects.NBIA can also federate with other instances of NBIA to support the response of multiple NBIA servers to a single query.

NCI's hosted instance of NBIA is freely available and provides researchers and clinicians with a robust DICOM archive that can securely share and access images to enhance scientific research and support clinical decision making. Anyone can deploy a local node of NBIA and, using caGrid infrastructure, securely share data across the grid.

The ultimate goals of the project include:

It is written in JAVA using Hibernate, Spring and icefaces.

National Biomedical Image Archive is distributed under the BSD 3-Clause License. Please see the NOTICE and LICENSE files for details.

You will find more details about National Biomedical Image Archive in the following links:

Please join us in further developing and improving National Biomedical Imaging Archive (NBIA).


This work is supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Grant Number U24TR002306. This work is solely the responsibility of the creators and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.