A new imaging technique pin-points the exact location and size of prostate cancer
Published:
18 June 2001 y., Monday
A new imaging technique that pin-points the exact location and size of prostate cancer could help hundreds of thousands of men worldwide. Other types of cancer could also be targeted.
The technique combines two existing imaging technologies, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), to target radiotherapy to the cancer cells and not surrounding healthy tissue.
CT scans are used to plan radiotherapy for most cancers, as the bone structure is easily visible. "The problem with CT, though, is that it doesn't give us detail of the soft tissues," says Peter Hoskins from Mount Vernon Hospital in Middlesex. All radiotherapists see is a "blob".
On the other hand, MRI can define tumours and soft tissue very clearly, but is less good at revealing the bone position. This means there is no "map" for use on directing the radiation.
The software developed at King's College London and the Royal Marsden Hospital now allows the soft tissue information to be transposed from the MRI to the CT scan. They plan to use this composite imaging in applying brachytherapy, where a series of radiation sources are focused directly into the walnut-sized prostate gland.
Radiotherapists must treat the entire tumour, but do not want to irradiate healthy tissue. Side-effects of such damage include diarrhoea, impotence and incontinence. The new imaging technique is expected to be validated later in 2001. The team believes it could avoid normal tissue damage in any cancer where MRI currently gives better images than CT scanning, such as brain tumours.
Šaltinis:
newscientist.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Some 56 000 people in the EU are currently waiting for a transplant operation. Every day 12 of them die waiting for an organ to be donated.
more »
Every day, across the vast country, Chinese school children put down their pens and perform a series of government-devised exercises intended to strengthen their eyes.
more »
D. Simmons said the experience of living for so long with a machine pumping her blood was "scary."
more »
A recent report found that children in Europe are not getting enough fruit and vegetables, so the European Commission is proposing to set aside money to ensure they get weekly fruit.
more »
Every year 7,000-8,000 people in the EU die because of drug use and a drugs overdose remains one of the main causes of death among young people.
more »
Bad health through a bad diet is a growing problem across Europe.
more »
In accordance with the EC Treaty rules on state aid, the European Commission has approved aid worth €90 million to be granted by France to the R&D programme “ADNA” covering the development of personalised medicine for infectious diseases, cancer and genetic diseases.
more »
October is international breast cancer awareness month. In Europe alone there are an estimated 430,000 new cases a year and in the EU breast cancer will affect one in 10 women before the age of 80.
more »
Today in the afternoon, President Valdas Adamkus had a lens replacement surgery in his right eye at Santariškių Clinical Hospital.
more »
The last four suspected bird flu patients two of them confirmed to have contracted the deadly H5N1 strain were discharged from a hospital in eastern Turkey, signalling an end to the recent outbreak, a doctor said on Saturday.
more »