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Sensitive Ultrasound Technology Detects Early-Stage Cancer

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 17 Nov 2008
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European researchers have developed highly sensitive ultrasound equipment that can detect tiny quantities of reflective microbubbles engineered to stick to specific tumor cells. The technique should identify tumors early and improve patients' chances of survival.

Most of the current diagnostic techniques--biopsy analysis, biochemical tests, and medical imaging--are not sufficiently sensitive. These frequently return a false-negative result, and the tumor is only discovered when it is much larger, and too late.

European researchers are developing a new method that will help clinicians visualize tiny quantities of diseased tissue in patients. The technology could detect tumors in their very earliest stages of development and help clinicians begin treatments much earlier, giving patients a much better chance of survival. The new approach uses medical ultrasound. A probe sends high-frequency acoustic waves into the body and detects how they bounce off the interfaces between different tissues.

To improve the sensitivity of this imaging technique, a sonographer may sometimes inject a contrast agent into patients, which greatly increases the scattering of the acoustic waves back to the probe. For ultrasound imaging, contrast agents are based on ‘microbubbles,' micron-sized gas-filled balls that show up brightly on the ultrasound image.

Researchers involved with the European Union- (EU)-funded TAMIRUT Project have developed a microbubble medium that can specifically target and bind to specific pathogenic cells in the body (such as endothelial cells of vessels lining the tumors). Combined with enhanced ultrasound equipment and signal processing capabilities, the system can detect where microbubbles adhere to target cells, and reveal the presence of early-stage tumors.

Working with the pharmaceutical company Bracco Research SA (Geneva, Switzerland), TAMIRUT researchers have developed a way to attach antibodies onto the surface of microbubbles. By selecting an antibody with an affinity for marker molecules found only on target vascular cells, the microbubbles adhere only to the target cells.

However, it is not easy to capture these hotspots on a scan. "We are looking at the very earliest stages of tumor growth, so there are not many cells present expressing the marker of interest,” explained Dr. Alessandro Nencioni, who coordinated the project. "There may be only three or four microbubbles adhered to a site and current ultrasound equipment is not able to pick these up. Work on the hardware and signal processing is an essential aspect of this project as we seek to develop next-generation ultrasound imaging capabilities.”

Esaote (Genoa, Italy), a manufacturer of medical imaging equipment, is working with several research partners and two SMEs (small and medium enterprises): Vermon (Tours, France), a manufacturer of medical imaging probes, and SignalGeneriX (Limassol, Cyprus), a small firm with expertise in signal processing. Their aim is to produce a scanner and a dedicated probe that can transmit and receive ultrasound waves across a wide range of frequencies and waveforms to exploit (without any modification) the harmonic components caused by nonlinear scattering of the acoustic wave of the microbubbles.

The scanning equipment must have sufficient processing power to interpret the waves picked up by the probe, update the live image and adjust the transmitted waveforms in real time. Their detecting function is ensured by a specifically developed signal processing methods, able to detect a very limited number of microbubbles (down to a single bubble), to estimate their concentration, and to track their behavior to get the diagnostic answer.

Originally, the project partners thought it would be possible to differentiate between bound and unbound microbubbles by the way they scatter particular ultrasound frequencies and wave forms. However, extensive simulations and laboratory testing have shown that this turns out to be very difficult. Instead, the scientists found a very simple answer: after 10 minutes, the microbubbles that are attached to target cells remain in place while the free microbubbles diffuse away.

The new probe should be able to detect and calculate their local concentration and operators will be able to visualize any areas of high microbubble density within an entire organ. The repetition of this new imaging technique over time could help medical staff to assess the evolution of a tumor, especially its vascularization. Using the engineered, targeted microbubble contrast agent, the improved ultrasound hardware and the signal processing, the TAMIRUT team has already demonstrated in simulations the potential of this approach for the early detection of prostate cancer.

This ultrasound method improves accuracy, patient comfort, and costs approximately half that of a biopsy. It could save European healthcare providers up to €250 million each year in biopsy costs alone.

The need for clinical trials of the targeted contrast agent and subsequent approval in humans means that the targeted microbubble agent is unlikely to be available for at least three years. However, the improved signal processing algorithms will help to increase the sensitivity of ultrasound equipment, irrespective of the use of these microbubbles.

Esaote is working with the other commercial partners to incorporate the new signal processing features into its medical imaging equipment.

Related Links:
TAMIRUT Project
Bracco Research
Esaote
Vermon
SignalGeneriX


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