General Electric Co. won approval from the Food and Drug Administration to offer its 3-D breast-imaging technology in the U.S., the company said, adding substantial new competition to the fast-growing market dominated by Hologic Inc.

Three-dimensional imaging--also known as tomosynthesis--combines X-rays taken from multiple angles to produce a more detailed picture than regular mammograms. The technology costs more than regular mammography, but finds more cancers with fewer false alarms, studies have found, and is rapidly replacing the traditional mammography in the $10 billion-a-year market for breast screenings.

Insurers and Medicare don't provide extra reimbursement for 3-D mammograms. Some hospitals charge patients extra for it--generally $50 to $75 per exam; other hospitals absorb the extra cost of the machines.

Hologic, which has had the sole approved 3-D breast-imaging device in the U.S. since 2001, estimates that more than six million U.S. women will have a 3-D mammogram this year, about 17% of all those screened. About 1,100 hospitals and imaging centers in the U.S. have purchased at least one 3-D Hologic system, that company has said.

GE said about half of the 4,000 GE breast-imaging devices in use in the U.S. can be upgraded to use its 3-D system, called SenoClaire. Even though the system takes images from nine different angles, patients receive the same dose of radiation as with a regular 2D mammogram, the company said.

Hologic's 3-D system won FDA approval for use along with a standard 2D mammogram, which can increase the radiation dose. Hologic says its system's radiation dose is below government safety standards, and that 30% of its U.S. sites now use its new low-dose device that is comparable to conventional mammography.

Peter J. Valenti III, president of Hologic's breast-health division, also noted that a major clinical trial, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in June, found that 3-D mammography technology increased invasive breast cancer detection by 41%, and decreased recalls by 15%, applied only to its device, and not GE's system.

Siemens AG filed for FDA approval of its 3-D system in late June and was unavailable for comment.

Rachael Bennett, a clinical analyst at MDBuyline, a health-research firm, said many hospitals had purchased Hologic equipment in recent years because it was the only 3-D breast-imaging system available, but others have been holding back, waiting for SenoClaire to win FDA approval.

"We may see a big influx of GE purchases," she said. The competition will give hospitals that want to purchase 3-D systems added negotiating power, she added.

Medicare may indicate later this year whether it will provide extra reimbursement for 3-D mammography. But even without it, the technology is fast overtaking regular scans. "Almost all the hospital purchases we're seeing are for tomosynthesis systems or systems that can be upgraded later," said Ms. Bennett.

Write to Melinda Beck at HealthJournal@wsj.com

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