Optical
Probe Might Find Missed Breast Cancers
ARLINGTON, Va., July 23, 2004 -- A light-sensitive probe is being developed
to help doctors spot breast cancer in some of the 70,000 American women
each year whose malignancies fail to show up in needle biopsies.
The technology also holds the potential of minimizing the trauma associated
with the procedure, in which a hollow needle the width of a pencil is
used to collect small tissue samples for testing.
Doctors now rely on X-rays or ultrasound images to guide the needle
to the area in question. They may take a dozen tissue samples to be
sure they do not miss anything. Yet sometimes they do.
"If you're in the wrong spot and you don't get the cancer, then
you're basically concluding that this woman doesn't have a disease that
needs to be treated," said Nirmala Ramanujam, Ph.D., assistant
professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Missed diagnoses occur in as many as 70,000 American women each year,
she said. Another 60,000 women have repeat biopsies because the initial
results are inconclusive.
Ramanujam, graduate students Carmalyn Lubawy and Changfang Zhu, and
radiologist Elizabeth Burnside, M.D., have developed thin, fiber-optic
probes that can be threaded through the hollow channel of a biopsy needle
to its tip. The probe, together with X-ray or ultrasound images, could
ensure that the biopsy needle accurately reaches its target. If successful,
Ramanujam's optical probes could be used as an adjunct to standard biopsies.
The probe emits light at specific wavelengths and then collects the
reflected light and fluorescence for analysis. The researchers look
at how much light is absorbed by tissue and reemitted as fluorescence.
They also measure how much light is scattered. Various components of
tissue --- such as amino acids, proteins, enzymes and blood --- absorb
and scatter light in specific ways. Tumors interact with light differently
than normal tissue does.
Preliminary testing in 56 breast tissue samples from 37 women showed
that the optical analysis correctly identified cancer with more than
90 percent accuracy. Further testing will begin in August on 250 patients.
The research group has fine-tuned the optical probe in preparation for
the new study and has won $1.2 million in support for the ongoing research
from the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Biomedical
Imaging and Bioengineering.
The probes can be trimmed thin enough to fit through a needle smaller
than the current 1/4-inch biopsy device. This would make the entire
procedure less invasive. Ramanujam has also simplified the analysis
by carefully reducing the number of light wavelengths needed to make
a diagnosis.
"Minimizing the number of wavelengths analyzed is advantageous
clinically because it lends speed to the process and should require
a less complex, more economical instrument," Ramanujam's group
reported in a recent issue of the journal Annals of Surgical Oncology.
Ramanujam received a Whitaker Foundation Biomedical Engineering Research
Grant in 2001 for research in this area.
Contact:
Nirmala Ramanujam, University
of Wisconsin-Madison
Frank Blanchard, The Whitaker
Foundation
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