Feasibility of ultrasound tomography–guided localized mild hyperthermia using a ring transducer: Ex vivo and in silico studies

Background As of 2022, breast cancer continues to be the most diagnosed cancer worldwide. This problem persists within the United States as well, as the American Cancer Society has reported that ∼12.5% of women will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer over the course of their lifetime. Therefor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical physics (Lancaster) 2022-09, Vol.49 (9), p.6120-6136
Hauptverfasser: Pattyn, Alexander, Kratkiewicz, Karl, Alijabbari, Naser, Carson, Paul L., Littrup, Peter, Fowlkes, J. Brian, Duric, Nebojsa, Mehrmohammadi, Mohammad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background As of 2022, breast cancer continues to be the most diagnosed cancer worldwide. This problem persists within the United States as well, as the American Cancer Society has reported that ∼12.5% of women will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer over the course of their lifetime. Therefore, a clinical need continues to exist to address this disease from a treatment and therapeutic perspective. Current treatments for breast cancer and cancers more broadly include surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. Adjuncts to these methods have been developed to improve the clinical outcomes for patients. One such adjunctive treatment is mild hyperthermia therapy (MHTh), which has been shown to be successful in the treatment of cancers by increasing effectiveness and reduced dosage requirements for radiation and chemotherapies. MHTh‐assisted treatments can be performed with invasive thermal devices, noninvasive microwave induction, heating and recirculation of extracted patient blood, or whole‐body hyperthermia with hot blankets. Purpose One common method for inducing MHTh is by using microwave for heat induction and magnetic resonance imaging for temperature monitoring. However, this leads to a complex, expensive, and inaccessible therapy platform. Therefore, in this work we aim to show the feasibility of a novel all‐acoustic MHTh system that uses focused ultrasound (US) to induce heating while also using US tomography (UST) to provide temperature estimates. Changes in sound speed (SS) have been shown to be strongly correlated with temperature changes and can therefore be used to indirectly monitor heating throughout the therapy. Additionally, these SS estimates allow for heterogeneous SS‐corrected phase delays when heating complex and heterogeneous tissue structures. Methods Feasibility to induce localized heat in tissue was investigated in silico with a simulated breast model, including an embedded tumor using continuous wave US. Here, both heterogenous acoustic and thermal properties were modeled in addition to blood perfusion. We further demonstrate, with ex vivo tissue phantoms, the feasibility of using ring‐based UST to monitor temperature by tracking changes in SS. Two phantoms (lamb tissue and human abdominal fat) with latex tubes containing varied temperature flowing water were imaged. The measured SS of the water at each temperature were compared against values that are reported in literature. Results Results from ex vivo tissue studies indicate suc
ISSN:0094-2405
2473-4209
DOI:10.1002/mp.15829