Axios Columbus

August 07, 2025
It's Thursday, Columbus.
☀️ Today's weather: Sunny with a high around 87.
🍌 Sounds like: "Bananaphone" by Raffi.
🍺 Situational awareness: Breweries around Columbus are offering specials for National IPA Day.
Today's newsletter is 951 words — a 3.5-minute read.
1 big thing: Controversial full-body MRIs
Depending on who you ask, a full-body MRI is either an early-detection breakthrough or an unnecessary procedure that harms more than helps.
Why it matters: The scans have become popular in part due to wellness influencers, celebrity endorsements and a distrust of conventional medicine, and more MRI companies plan openings in Columbus.
Zoom in: Columbus already has centers like ProScan Imaging and Craft Body Scan, and international wellness companies like Prenuvo and Ezra have Central Ohio locations on the way.
By the numbers: Prenuvo has completed 50,000 scans since December and 150,000 total since 2018, CEO Andrew Lacy tells Axios.
What they found: Prenuvo scans spotted cancer in 2.2% of mostly asymptomatic patients, according to an ongoing study conducted by the MRI company and presented at an American Association for Cancer Research conference in April.
- In the study, which included 1,011 patients in Canada in the early findings, roughly half of the biopsies prompted by scan findings turned out to reveal cancer.
Yes, but: Just because a scan detected cancer, that doesn't mean the cancer was aggressive or that the detection extended someone's lifespan.
- In the study, two breast cancer cases were not detected by a whole-body MRI.
Between the lines: OSU associate professor of radiology Mina Makary has researched and written about the topic extensively. He says the biggest issue with these scans is a lack of specificity.
- "No two MRIs are the same," he tells Axios. "The type of images we acquire during an MRI are tailored to the organ we're scanning and the disease we're looking for."
- Full-body scans are also likely filled with "incidental findings" that might otherwise never affect your life but could cause stress for everyone involved.
- "There's anxiety for the patient, cost to the patient and to the health care system, and the tests we do to figure things out add their own risks and complications," Makary says.
What they're saying: Full-body scans are "the bane of my existence," says oncologist Marleen Meyers, director of NYU Langone's survivorship program at the Perlmutter Cancer Center.
- She says that most findings from full-body MRIs are false positives or benign, but "the knowledge, the stress and fact you start treatment then upends your life."
- "Studies with these scans so far have not shown any improved survival," she tells Axios.
The other side: Collecting enough data to provide evidence that the tests improve survival would probably take decades, says Lacy.
Reality check: A full-body MRI — which can cost $499 to $4,500 — isn't accessible for everyone.
- Meyers recommends that patients with a known cancer history or specific symptoms get directed screenings instead of full-body scans.
2. Nutshells: Your local news roundup
🧑🏭 Intel's chip manufacturing process is struggling to reach desired quality benchmarks. (Reuters)
🏫 Ohio State faculty is criticizing President Ted Carter for "bending to the whims" of the Trump administration after remarks Carter made on CBS News' "Face the Nation." (WCMH-TV)
🚀 Voyager Technologies, a space and defense company, plans an innovation-focused "science park" at Ohio State. (WBNS-TV)
⚖️ ICE arrested an 18-year-old Monday at the Franklin County Municipal Court amid criticisms that the court continues to allow agents to make arrests on its grounds. (WOSU)
⚡️ A planned solar panel project spanning nearly 1,700 acres faces pushback from Fairfield County. (Columbus Business First 🔒)
🛢️ Ohio's Orphan Well Program has plugged about 2,300 abandoned oil and gas wells since 1977. (Ohio Capital Journal)
3. 📘 Throwback Thursday: School in the 1820s
Our Franklin County Historical Marker Tour heads to a New Albany site appropriate for back-to-school season.
The marker: Wagnor Cemetery, a pioneer burial ground and the location of Plain Township's first school.
Flashback: It was built in the 1820s, before the days of public education.
- Teacher Jacob Smith charged $1.50 per pupil.
- The presence of a cemetery suggests the log building was likely also used for church services.
😬 Zoom in: If only Smith had been around when the marker was placed. Its text features the misspelling of "Cenrtal" in describing nearby Central College Road.
Around this time, the federal government had offered Plain Township land to "all comers" for just $2 an acre.
- That'd get you 7 acres for just $14 — a 6.93-acre lot for sale nearby is currently listed at $3.5 million.
Yes, but: Land was cheap, but it was a tough life with all the "hazards the pioneers faced as they transformed the wilderness," the marker describes.
- Among them, war: Some of those buried there served in the War of 1812 and the Civil War.
4. 🍌 Go bananas in Gahanna
Keep your eyes peeled if you're exploring Gahanna. You could win some cash by participating in a new scavenger hunt.
How it works: The Gahanna Chamber of Commerce has placed seven banana statues at local businesses. If you find one, scan the QR code to enter a $100 Visa gift card drawing.
- Find all seven for a chance to win $500.
- The event ends Sept. 30.
💭 Alissa's thought bubble: A social media tip helped me find banana No. 5 — and lots of delicious baked goods, including cannoli and cookies. No complaints here.

Thanks to Tyler Buchanan for editing today's newsletter.
Our picks:
👋 Alissa is back from a few days off.
🍺 Andrew is more of a pilsner guy these days.
🏈 Tyler is already gearing up for the first Buckeyes game, which should be a doozy.
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