Group reveals work on hybrid acoustic-optical imaging

2018 06 18 20 05 8690 Breast Vascular Tissue 20180618203932

Researchers from the California Institute of Technology have developed an imaging technique that combines optical with acoustic imaging. They believe it could someday offer a viable alternative to screening mammography, according to a paper published online June 15 in Nature Communications.

Mammography reduces deaths from breast cancer, but it also exposes patients to radiation and requires tissue compression, which some women find uncomfortable, wrote the team led by Lihong Wang, PhD. In addition, the technology's performance is compromised in dense breast tissue. Other breast imaging modalities, such as MRI, may involve contrast agents for optimum performance, Wang said in a statement released by the institute.

In an attempt to develop a less invasive, more effective breast cancer screening tool, Wang and colleagues built a scanner based on what they call breast photoacoustic CT (PACT), which uses the photoacoustic effect to convert absorbed optical energy into acoustic energy. PACT is capable of generating high-resolution images with deeper penetration than conventional optical imaging systems.

The group has developed a PACT scanner that features a table on which a woman lies prone with her breast in a recess containing ultrasound sensors and a laser. The device shines a near-infrared laser pulse into the breast tissue. The pulse spreads through the breast and is absorbed by hemoglobin molecules in the patient's red blood cells, causing the molecules to vibrate ultrasonically, according to the researchers.

The vibrations are tracked by an array of 512 ultrasonic sensors, the data from which are used to create an image of the breast's internal structures in a process that is similar to ultrasound imaging, the group wrote. PACT can image structures as small as 0.25 mm to a depth of 4 cm. The scan takes only 15 seconds -- in sharp contrast to other imaging modalities, such as breast MRI, which can take 45 minutes.

Wang and colleagues have scanned eight women using the PACT technology. The PACT exams identified eight out of nine tumors present in the pilot study participants, they found.

A false-color image that shows the vascular structure of a healthy human breast. Image courtesy of the California Institute of Technology.A false-color image that shows the vascular structure of a healthy human breast. Image courtesy of the California Institute of Technology.

Wang has founded a company that licensed the PACT technology and will conduct large-scale clinical studies, he said. Going forward, he and his colleagues also plan to investigate the PACT technology for other uses, such as for assessing vascular tissue health in patients with diabetes.

"Our goal is to build a dream machine for breast screening, diagnosis, monitoring, and prognosis without any harm to the patient," he said. "We want it to be fast, painless, safe, and inexpensive."

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