“…Wood et al [127] discuss this setting up the treatment room of the future at NIH that includes the following: (1) pre-procedural: co-registered PET, MR and CT, tumour and vascular segmentation, vascular tree visualised in the treatment field, antenna pre-treatment planning with FEM model to predict performance; (2) intra-procedural: guidance and tracking of devices, tracked US, organ motion compensation, ablation feedback, thermography and thermal dose monitoring; and (3) post-procedural: functional MR/PET/CT, US-based elastography and match of pre-to post-ablation. Although that paper was published in 2007, more contemporary papers have begun to show the successful clinical implementation and technical hurdles overcome to implement image registration and fusion [124,128], treatment planning with on-the-fly computational modelling [129,130] and robotic assistance [125,129]. Beyond experimental work at academic medical centres, many of these features have yet to be clinically available by manufacturers, probably due to a combination of technology, safety, and regulatory hurdles.…”