MR-spectroscopy Helps Doctors Pinpoint Prostate Cancer | MRI
LinkedIn Login

Connect healthcare products, companies and hospitals with your LinkedIn network.

Facebook Login

Interact with your Facebook network around healthcare products, companies and hospitals.

Login With Facebook
MedicExchange Login

Enjoy Premium Access as a MedicExchange Member.

       Enter Your Email Address to Receive a
Copy of MedicExhange Member Demograhpics

Facebook Twitter Linkedin
Facebook: MedicExchange
Twitter: MedicExchange
MRI MR-spectroscopy Helps Doctors Pinpoint Prostate Cancer

MR-spectroscopy Helps Doctors Pinpoint Prostate Cancer

Radiology News

U.S. researchers have found magnetic resonance spectroscopy to pinpoint where in the prostate a tumor may be hiding by using a imaging technique that measures the chemical composition of tissues.

Although the research is in its early stages, the finding may lead to a better way for doctors to diagnose prostate cancer, they said on Wednesday.

A team at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston used magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which analyzes the biochemistry rather than the structure of tissues

"It detects tumors that cannot be found with other imaging approaches and may give us information that can help determine the best course of treatment," said Leo Cheng of Mass General, whose study appears in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Blood tests that screen for prostate-specific antigen or PSA can suggest cancer, but benign growths can generate excess PSA too and currently doctors have no imaging test that can confirm the size or location of tumors within the prostate, or tell how aggressive they might be.

Prostate biopsies are done "blind" and can easily miss a tumor. Doctors have routinely recommended prostate cancer screening in men over 50 based on the assumption that early diagnosis and treatment is better than doing nothing.

But a study in August found that routine screening for prostate cancer resulted in more than 1 million U.S. men being diagnosed with tumors who might otherwise have suffered no ill effects from them. Standard forms of treatment -- surgery, radiation or hormone therapy -- can cause impotence and incontinence. But while many prostate cancers are slow-growing, some are deadly.

To address this, Cheng and colleagues turned to MR spectroscopy, which relies on different radio wave frequencies to measure the chemical composition of tissues. No contrast agent is needed. In a prior study, Cheng's team used the scanner to analyze all the different metabolic pathways that are active in cancerous prostate glands.

"We found out that cancer tissue has a different chemical profile compared with normal tissue," he said.

They identified 36 critical metabolites that were active in prostate tumors that differed from a healthy prostate. Using this profile, they developed a software program that compares the chemical information from the MR spectroscopy to the profile of a prostate tumor.

Then they scanned prostate glands that had been removed and were later dissected in the lab. They found the software was highly accurate at finding cancers within the tissue.

Cheng said his lab is trying to replicate the findings in a larger study, and they hope to develop more technology that can identify aggressive cancers from the slow-growing kind. Currently, the work is done on a research scanner, but the team hopes to adapt it for scanners widely available in hospitals.

Source: Reuters

Discuss more about MRI in the MRI user group.

 

Related Articles

Breaking News