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Archive for the ‘Medical Imaging Technology, Image Processing/Computing, MRI, CT, Nuclear Medicine, Ultra Sound’ Category

Ultrasounds for Improving Drug Delivery

Reporter: Danut Dragoi, PhD
Using the property of sounds to proppagate in aqueous media, such that in human body, researcher from MIT and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) have found a way to enable ultra-rapid delivery of drugs to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract  where this approach could make it easier to deliver drugs to patients suffering from GI disorders with inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis, and Crohn’s disease.

As we know from Physics the speed of sound in liquids, for example in water is 1,507 m/sec at 30 C degrees which is greater than that in air, 340m/sec, we can call them ultrasounds. Any sounds in human fluid or fluid composite carries on an accoustic energy that can excert a pressure or movement to any molecule of disolved drugg, that usually has a good solubility in water. If the molecules dissolved in GI truct that belongs to a specific drug are under a sonic field they can be moved accordingly, increasing the probability to get inside the targeted cells to be cured by that specific drug.

VIEW VIDEO

http://news.mit.edu/2015/ultrasound-drug-delivery-inflammatory-bowel-disease-1021

Currently, GI diseases are usually treated with drugs administered as an enema, which must be maintained in the colon for hours while the drug is absorbed. However, this can be difficult for patients who are suffering from diarrhea and incontinence. To overcome that, the researchers sought a way to stimulate more rapid drug absorption. The novelty of drugg delivery efficiently using ultrasounds is that of an enhanced delivery.
Ultrasound improves drug delivery by a mechanism known as transient cavitation. When a fluid is exposed to sound waves, the waves induce the formation of tiny bubbles that implode and create micro-jets that can penetrate and push medication into tissue. In the study shown here , the researchers first tested their new approach in the pig GI tract, where they found that applying ultrasound greatly increased absorption of both insulin, a large protein, and mesalamine, a smaller molecule often used to treat colitis. In order to demonstrate a better treatment the researchers next investigated whether ultrasound-enhanced drug delivery could effectively treat disease in animals.

In tests of mice, the researchers found that they could resolve colitis symptoms by delivering mesalamine followed by one second of ultrasound every day for two weeks. Giving this treatment every other day also helped, but delivering the drug without ultrasound had no effect.
They also showed that ultrasound-enhanced delivery of insulin effectively lowered blood sugar levels in pigs.

It is worth mentioning that a modeling of ultrasound -induced micro-bubble oscillations in a capillary blood vessel exists here
in which a study is focused on the transient blood–brain barrier disruption (BBBD) for drug delivery applications.

In other studies, the ultrasound mediated drug delivery for cancer treatment is shown as a review of therapeutic ultrasound used to thermally ablate solid tumors since the 90s. A variety of cancers are presently being treated clinically, taking advantage of ultrasound- or MR-imaging guidance. A review summary of in vivo ultrasound-based strategies shows the deliver drug payloads to tumor environments, to enhance permeability of vessel walls and cell membranes, and to activate drugs and genes in situ.

An important physical effect of ultrasounds is their action decrease with the square distance from the source. In order to avoid increasing power of ultrasounds with negative effects on human body, the study shown in here considers the mechanisms responsible for how ultrasound and biological materials interact and how ultrasound-induced bio-effect or risk studies focus on issues related to the effects of ultrasound on biological materials. Whenever ultrasonic energy is propagated into an attenuating material such as tissue, the amplitude of the wave decreases with distance. The wave attenuation is due to either

  • absorption
  • or scattering

Absorption is a mechanism that represents that portion of ultrasonic wave that is converted into heat, and scattering can be thought of as that portion of the wave, which changes direction. Because the medium can absorb energy to produce heat, a temperature rise may occur as long as the rate of heat production is greater than the rate of heat removal. Current interest with thermally mediated ultrasound-induced bioeffects has focused on the thermal isoeffect concept. The non-thermal mechanism that has received the most attention is acoustically generated cavitation wherein ultrasonic energy by cavitation bubbles is concentrated. Acoustic cavitation, in a broad sense, refers to ultrasonically induced bubble activity occurring in a biological material that contains pre-existing gaseous inclusions. Cavitation-related mechanisms include radiation force, microstreaming, shock waves, free radicals, microjets and strain. It is more challenging to deduce the causes of mechanical effects in tissues that do not contain gas bodies.

SOURCE
[1] http://news.mit.edu/2015/ultrasound-drug-delivery-inflammatory-bowel-disease-1021
[2] https://www1.ethz.ch/ltnt/publications/Journal/pubimg/2012_Wiedemair1.pdf

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Focused Ultrasounds and Their Applications in Medicine

Reporter: Danut Dragoi, PhD

Any waves focused in a point of material that support their propagation produce heating effects that are useful in medical applications.

Doctors in Los Angeles applied this heating principle for acoustic waves. They use high intensity focused ultrasounds to kill certain cancer tumors that allows the patient to go home on the same day. Surgeons at the Keck Medical Center of the University of Southern California became the first doctors to use this procedure on a patient with the help of high intensity focused ultrasound, or HIFU, and new robotic technology.

The principle of focused wave is not new, but the technology to apply it is. In many places of the world the research on ultrasound applications is producing important results. Doctors from Europe imported equipment to apply this technique. An excellent review and description of how HIFU technique is working given here .

We need to highlight that the temperature increases exponentially with the distance close to the focus point inside the human body where instantaneous protein destruction occurs. As remarked in the review paper mentioned in the previous link the various methods of focusing ultra sound (US) waves have been another important issue.

The simplest and cheapest (often most accurate) method may be a self-focusing, for instance, a spherically curved US source (transducer). An US transducer constructed according to this method, has a beam focus fixed at the position determined from the geometrical specifications of the transducer. To compensate for its lack of versatility, a flat US transducer with an interchangeable acoustic lens system was devised. The acoustic lens enables variation of focusing properties such as focal length and focal geometry. However, a drawback of the lens system is that US waves undergo sonic attenuation and the sonic signal has to be guided  due to absorption by the lens.

Recently, a phased array US transducer technique was adopted for HIFU therapy. By sending temporally different sets of electronic signals to each specific transducer component, this technique enables beam steering and focusing, which can move a focal spot in virtually any direction within physically allowed ranges.

HIFU clinical applications are listed here. Among important clinical applications, there are listed:

  • prostate tumors: with several devices under ultrasonic guidance and commercially available as (Ablatherm®, Sonablate ®), Fibroids with MRgHIFU procedures and available as Exablate ® (Insightec + GE)-
  • FDA 2004 and Philips CE approved Dec 2009, breast cancer on clinical research, bone tumors on clinical research, brain on small clinical studies with limitation: skull (bone) acoustic interface and no motion,
  • liver using Haifu® under ultrasonic guidance MRgHIFU procedures: small clinical studies with limitation on aeric and bone interfaces and motions.

From technological point of view, the most important element of a HIFU is the piezoelectric transducer that takes an alternative voltage of high frequency and convert the electrical energy into acoustic energy.

The physics of generation of ultrasounds is shown in the link here. The electronic circuits behind the HIFU devices is refined over a period of about two decades reaching today with commercial devices available not only for research but also for private clinics around the world.

The precision of focusing the acoustic power into a small region of the human soft tissue depends on the working distance of the HFU device as well as high accuracy of controlling the image of the targeted area. Successes of this technology is reported in here.

SOURCE

http://www.voanews.com/content/high-intensity-focused-ultrasound-used-to-kill-cancer-tumor/2459185.html

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anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV)

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Curator

LPBI

 

Positron Emission Tomography scanning in Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies-Associated Vasculitis

Kemna, Michael J. BSc; Vandergheynst, Frédéric MD; Vöö, Stefan MD, PhD; Blocklet, et al.

Tools for evaluation of disease activity in patients with anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) include scoring clinical manifestations, determination of biochemical parameters of inflammation, and obtaining tissue biopsies. These tools, however, are sometimes inconclusive. 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) scans are commonly used to detect inflammatory or malignant lesions. Our objective is to explore the ability of PET scanning to assess the extent of disease activity in patients with AAV.

Consecutive PET scans made between December 2006 and March 2014 in Maastricht (MUMC) and between July 2008 and June 2013 in Brussels (EUH) to assess disease activity in patients with AAV were retrospectively included. Scans were re-examined and quantitatively scored using maximum standard uptake values (SUVmax). PET findings were compared with C-reactive protein (CRP) and ANCA positivity at the time of scanning.

Forty-four scans were performed in 33 patients during a period of suspected active disease. All but 2 scans showed PET-positive sites, most commonly the nasopharynx (n = 22) and the lung (n = 22). Forty-one clinically occult lesions were found, including the thyroid gland (n = 4 patients), aorta (n = 8), and bone marrow (n = 7). The amount of hotspots, but not the highest observed SUVmax value, was higher if CRP levels were elevated. Seventeen follow-up scans were made in 13 patients and showed decreased SUVmax values.

FDG PET scans in AAV patients with active disease show positive findings in multiple sites of the body even when biochemical parameters are inconclusive, including sites clinically unsuspected and difficult to assess otherwise.

 

Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA; Wegener’s) is an inflammatory disease entity affecting small to medium vessels. It is, together with microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) and eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA; Churg Strauss Syndrome), characterized by the presence of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) and they are frequently grouped together under the term ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV).1

Early diagnosis and assessment of the extent of disease activity are important for adequate therapeutic decisions.1 Multiple tools may be helpful, such as biochemical parameters of inflammation, imaging techniques, and tissue biopsies. Even though these tools suffice to diagnose active disease in most episodes, the results can sometimes be inconclusive. In particular, it is sometimes problematic to determine whether symptoms are due to active disease, vasculitic damage, and/or treatment-related side-effects.

2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) scanning is used for detecting high glucose metabolism in malignancies, infectious, and auto-immune diseases.2–4 Co-registration with computed tomography (CT) allows the increased FDG uptake to be localized to the underlying anatomy. PET scanning has been proven to be a useful diagnostic tool in large vessel vasculitis.5–8 PET scanning can visualize glucose-consuming inflamed vessels, provided that their diameter is >4 mm. The limited spatial resolution was previously thought to be insufficient to detect the involvement of small- and medium-size vessels.6,7 Recent studies, however, have shown that PET scans show abnormalities in patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis.9–11 This novel imaging technique may therefore be a useful tool for diagnosing active disease and, in addition, to assess the severity and the extent of the disease. The latter may be relevant to detect occult diagnostic biopsy sites as previously demonstrated in sarcoidosis.12

The objective of our study is to explore the ability of PET scanning to assess the extent of disease activity in patients with AAV.

 

Study Population

Consecutive PET scans were performed in patients with AAV at Maastricht University Medical Center (MUMC) between December 2006 and March 2014 and at Erasme University Hospital (EUH) in Brussels between July 2008 and June 2013 and were retrospectively included. All patients fulfilled a diagnosis of GPA according to the 2012 revised International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference Nomenclature.13 Patients were previously treated according to the recommendations of the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR).14 Disease states were defined according to the EULAR recommendations.15 A PET scan was performed in patients with clinically suspected disease activity (diagnosis or relapse), whereas other tools for evaluation of activity were inconclusive. The possibility of an active bacterial or viral infection was excluded by culture, serology, and persistence of symptoms despite empirical antibiotic treatment. This study was carried out in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration.

Diagnostic Parameters

An extensive diagnostic work-up was done in all cases, including analysis of clinical features, laboratory assessment, imaging techniques, and, if appropriate, a biopsy. Laboratory assessment included high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP, cutoff value ≥10 ng/mL) levels, ANCA levels, and urine analysis at the time of scanning. Hematuria was defined as ≥10 erythrocytes in a urinary sediment, combined with dysmorphic erythrocytes and/or red blood cell casts. In Maastricht, ANCA levels were determined using the Fluorescent-Enzyme Immuno-Assay (FEIA) method.16 FEIA detection for both proteinase-3 (PR3) and myeloperoxidase (MPO) antibodies were fully automated as performed in a UniCAP 100 (Pharmacia Diagnostics). Values ≥10 AU were considered positive.

 

A whole-body [18F]-FDG-PET/CT scan was performed in both centers. In Maastricht, a Gemini_ PET-CT (Philips Medical Systems) scanner with time-of-flight (TOF) capability was used, together with a 64-slice Brilliance CT scanner. This scanner has a transverse and axial Field of View (FOV) of 57.6 and 18 cm, respectively. The spatial resolution is around 5 mm. In Brussels, a Gemini_ PET-CT (Philips Medical Systems) scanner was used without TOF capability, but with the same PET FOV and spatial resolution, together with a 16-slice Brilliance CT scanner.

 

 

Patient Characteristics

Thirty-three patients were included; an overview of the patient characteristics is shown in Table 1. Twenty patients were positive for PR3-ANCA at diagnosis, 9 patients for MPO-ANCA, and 4 patients were ANCA-negative.

Table 1

Table 1
Image Tools

Forty-four PET scans were made during an episode of suspected disease activity (Table 2). Eleven scans were performed at diagnosis and 33 scans at a suspected relapse. The suspected relapses occurred after a median of 68 (30–113) months since diagnosis. In 5 patients, ≥2 consecutive episodes occurred during which a PET scan was performed. These patients were in remission between episodes.

Table 2

Table 2
Image Tools

Results of PET Scans During Suspected Disease Activity

All PET scans during an episode of suspected disease activity except 2 revealed enhanced non-physiological FDG uptake. Table 3 shows the anatomic location of the positive sites and the corresponding median SUVmax values. The majority of these sites disclosed a SUVmax value between >2.5 and <6. Examples of PET/CT images of patients with AAV are shown in Figures 1 and Figures 2.

Table 3

Table 3
Image Tools

In our study, PET scans in AAV patients revealed positive findings in multiple sites of the body, including sites not clinically suspected and difficult to assess otherwise. PET scans may show FDG-positive findings during episodes in which other tools for evaluation of disease activity are inconclusive.

Similar to our findings using Gallium-67 [67Ga] scintigraphy17 in patients with GPA, PET scans seem to be a sensitive tool to assess disease activity. In our current study, all but 2 scans showed non-physiological FDG uptake during an episode of clinically suspected disease activity. Compared with gallium scanning, however, PET scanning offers additional information. First, Gallium scintigraphy suffers from practical limitations, such as the required interval between time of injection of the radiopharmaceuticals and time of scanning (48–72 hours) and the high radiation exposure. Second, the spatial resolution is higher in PET scans. Third, a low-dose CT scan may be used concomitantly to correlate the FDG uptake with the precise anatomical location. In sarcoidosis, PET scans are of value in detecting occult diagnostic biopsy sites.12 In our cohort, 41 clinically occult sites were found on the PET scan, and in 1 patient this resulted in a diagnostic biopsy.9

Whether hotspots on the PET scan can be attributed to activity of vasculitis is sometimes difficult to assess. A biopsy of PET-positive lesions would result in a definitive diagnosis. However, such a strategy is not realistic, as it does not correspond to routine clinical practice and was not performed in the current study. As we observed a favorable outcome after intensifying immunosuppressive treatment, we hypothesize that these patients indeed had active disease at the time of scanning. It is important to note that PET scans do not differentiate active vasculitis from infections, as observed in 2 of our patients with PET-positive findings due to an underlying fungal infection. In one of these patients, a biopsy of a clinically occult lesion led to the discovery of cryptococcal myositis and masquerading vasculitis.18 The differentiation between infections and ANCA-mediated disease activity remains an area of uncertainty, especially because there is strong evidence that infections may be an important trigger in the multifactorial etiology of ANCA-associated vasculitis.19In the future, more sensitive diagnostic modalities, such as the combination of PET scanning with magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MRI), may identify the infectious foci, which started the cascade leading to the (re)activation of vasculitis.

Most importantly, PET scans revealed abnormalities during episodes of active disease in which ANCA were sometimes not detected and CRP levels not increased. However, more hotspots were observed if the CRP levels were elevated. In contrast, the highest observed SUVmax values were not related to CRP levels. These findings suggest that the disease may be more extensive, but not more severe, if biochemical parameters of inflammation are increased.

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Dense Breast Mammogram

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Curator

LPBI

 

 

The Problem With Mammograms

http://forward.com/culture/324003/the-problem-with-mammograms/#ixzz3queBnx00

 

Hallie Leighton had dense breasts — a fact she discovered only in her late 30s, via a mammogram. She grew up in an Ashkenazi family in New York, pursued a career in writing and worked with organizations promoting peace between Israelis and Arabs. By 2013 she was making a documentary on her father Jan Leighton, an actor who set the record as an actor for appearing in the most roles (2,407 according to the 1985 Guinness Book of World Records). She was never able to complete it. She died that year, at the age of 42.

Every woman in Leighton’s family had breast cancer, so she began getting annual mammograms at 35 — five years earlier than the recommended age. In 2009 the results of Leighton’s mammogram came in as “negative” or “normal”; by 2013 she was bedridden, undergoing her final days of chemotherapy.

When Leighton was first diagnosed in 2010, her doctor told her, “You have breast cancer, and it was there in 2009.” The tumor in Leighton’s breast went undiscovered until it was palpable — and at that point, the cancer was already in stage 4.

Happygram,” a documentary which exposes some of the shortcomings in mammography, chronicles Leighton’s struggle with cancer and the implications of having dense breasts.

“Most women simply aren’t informed that they have dense breast tissue,” said Leighton’s best friend Julie Marron. She wrote and directed the documentary, which is currently screening at film festivals around the country.

Breast density is defined by the relative amount of fat in relation to the amount of connective and epithelial tissue (tissue that lines blood vessels and cavities). When more than 50% of breast tissue is connective and epithelial tissue, instead of fatty tissue, the breasts are considered dense. Mammography is the only way to determine breast density.

“If you have dense breasts, what looks dense on a mammogram looks the same as a cancer would look. It tends to confuse or confound the physician, and reduces the sensitivity of the mammogram,” said Gerald Kolb, founder and president of The Breast Group, which counsels clients on different technologies in breast care. “Hallie Leighton’s breasts looked like snowballs; there was no chance they were going to find anything with the mammogram.”

Forty percent of women who are screened for breast cancer have dense breast tissue. These women also account for more than 70% of all invasive cancers. “Mammograms are not very effective screening tools for these women, as they miss between 50% and 75% of all invasive cancers in dense breast tissue,” Marron said. “This is obviously a very critical issue when you are dealing with a population that is more likely to develop cancer.”

Ashkenazi women are even more at risk. They are 1.6 times more likely than the general population to have dense breast tissue, according to Kolb. Moreover, one in 40 Ashkenazi women will test positive for one or both of BRCA gene mutations responsible for breast cancer. For the general population, that number is between one in 350 and one in 800.The BRCA 1 or 2 genes don’t cause cancer, they fight cancer, Kolb says. But if the gene is mutated, the body is not as well equipped to fight the cancer.

“A woman with a BRCA mutation has a lifetime risk of around 33% to 87%, depending on the gene and mutation,” Marron said. “Compare this to a lifetime risk of 12% for developing breast cancer for the overall population.” BRCA gene mutations can be inherited from either or both parents, and therefore they can be present in men as well as in women.

Breast density and BRCA gene mutations are not directly related, but both independently present an increased susceptibility to breast cancer.

“The biggest risk is that a doctor is not going to find the cancer when it’s really small,” Kolb said. When a tumor is detected at a centimeter or smaller, there’s a 95% cure rate. But if the cancer is the size of a golf ball by the time it’s detected, Kolb says, the woman has a 60% chance of living for five years, and then her mortality increases dramatically.

The good news is that mammography isn’t the only method of detecting breast cancer; the bad news is that very few people know this. “What we’re trying to do in the density movement is give women enough information so they can ask appropriate questions of a doctor,” Kolb said.

Kolb advises high-risk women to get a genetic risk analysis, which can be performed by a genetic counselor or a radiologist. He advises getting the risk analysis as early as age 25, but doing so is a personal decision. Not every woman is emotionally prepared to know the results.

“Mammography is a starting point,” said Dr. Dennis McDonald, a California-based women’s imager. Additionally, doctors recommend that women with dense breasts get an MRI, which McDonald says is reserved for high-risk women. It’s an expensive, invasive and time-consuming procedure that requires the injection of fluid in order to read the MRI. As of yet, doctors do not know the side effects of getting an annual MRI.

“A doctor should have started [Leighton] on an MRI right away. She was high risk and they chose to just monitor with a mammogram,” Kolb said. “That’s insufficient.”

Breast ultrasound is another alternative for women with dense breast tissue. “Most of the time, breast density doesn’t present a problem [with ultrasounds],” McDonald said. Though the ultrasound is effective in detecting cancer, he says the downside is that radiologists are often not that comfortable with the technology, simply because they have little experience with it. There are also a lot of false positives, he adds, which result in unnecessary exams or biopsies.

As “Happygram” documents, informing women of their breast density and of alternatives to mammography is a highly charged political issue.

“The whole breast cancer industry has grown up around mammograms,” Marron said. “Physicians weren’t educated on [breast density], deliberately so to a certain extent, and refused to inform patients on this issue, which is really outrageous if you think about it.” Marron says that doctors are required by law and ethical guidelines to inform patients of “material” medical information. “There is no legitimate reason that women have not been informed of this information,” she noted.

After Leighton’s diagnosis, she wanted to ensure that other women didn’t suffer the same misfortune of all-too-late tumor discovery on account of dense breast tissue. She gave media interviews, lobbied in Albany and starred in “Happygram,” all the while undergoing chemotherapy. She died four months after the Breast Density Information Bill passed in New York.

The law requires that every mammography report given to a patient with dense breasts inform the patient in plain language that she has dense breast tissue and that she should talk to her physician about the possible benefits of additional screenings. In New York, the first state in the nation to pass this kind of law, at least 2,500 women with dense breasts and invasive breast cancer received “normal” or “negative” results on their mammograms.

Similar legislation has been passed in more than 20 states throughout the country, but not without objection. Many well-intentioned radiologists, poorly informed about alternative screening options, feared that telling women the limitations of mammography would cause them to lose faith in it altogether and not get tested. Others argued that the information would make women anxious, and that it wouldn’t be fair for those who couldn’t afford additional testing. And still further arguments against informing women were possibly impacted by financial considerations, Marron added.

“Women aren’t getting the benefit of full notification across the board yet,” Marron said. “I think that has to change through education. That’s the primary reason we made this movie. There’s been so much resistance within the medical community to telling women. Change isn’t going to come from the medical community, it has to come from the patients.”

Ashkenazi women shouldn’t panic, Kolb says, but they need to carefully examine their breast density and alternative screening options: “Anytime you have a preventative tragedy like that, you have to do everything in your power to stop it from happening.”

Madison Margolin is a freelance writer based in New York. She writes frequently for the Village Voice.

Read more: http://forward.com/culture/324003/the-problem-with-mammograms/#ixzz3qufQOSmn

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Twitter Offers Valuable Insights Into The Experience Of MRI Patients, Charles Sturt University Study

Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, PhD

Read at:

Twitter offers valuable insights into the experience of MRI patients

Tweets can give medical professionals a window into the minds of patients, according to a new study published in the Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Sciences

Philadelphia, PA, October 28, 2015 – Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) can be a stressful experience for many people, but clinicians have few ways to track the thoughts and feelings of their patients regarding this procedure. While the social networking site Twitter is known for breaking news and celebrity tweets, it may also prove to be a valuable feedback tool for medical professionals looking to improve the patient experience, according to a new study published in the December issue of the Journal of Medical Imaging and Radiation Sciences.

Johnathan Hewis, MSc, PgCert (LTHE), PgCert (BE), BSc Hon, an investigator from Charles Sturt University in Australia, analyzed 464 tweets related to MRI over the course of one month and found that patients, their friends, and family members were sharing their thoughts and feelings about all aspects of the procedure through the microblogging site. Tweets were categorized into three themes: MRI appointment, scan experience, and diagnosis.

Twitter is a giant in the social media space. In 2014, 19% of the entire adult population of the U.S. used Twitter, with almost 90% of those individuals accessing the service from their mobile phones. Because it is so ubiquitous, Twitter can provide crucial new insights to which practitioners would otherwise not be privy. In the study, patients expressed anxiety about many aspects of the process, including a lot of stress over the possibility of bad news. “The findings of this study indicate that anticipatory anxiety can manifest over an extended time period and that the focus can shift and change along the MRI journey,” explained Hewis. “An appreciation of anxiety related to results is an important clinical consideration for MRI facilities and referrers.”

The study found that tweets encapsulated patient thoughts about many other parts of the procedure including the cost, the feelings of claustrophobia, having to keep still during the scan, and the sound the MRI machine makes. One particularly memorable tweet about the sound read, “Ugh, having an MRI is like being inside a pissed off fax machine!”

Not all the tweets were centered around stress. Many friends and family members expressed sentiments of support including prayers and offering messages of strength. Some patients used Twitter to praise their healthcare team or give thanks for good results. Others spoke about the fact they liked having an MRI because it gave them some time to themselves or offered them a chance to nap.

Twitter isn’t just words, it’s also a way to share pictures. “An unexpected discovery of the examination preparation process was the ‘MRI gown selfie,'” revealed Hewis. “Fifteen patients tweeted a self-portrait photograph taken inside the changing cubicle while posing in their MRI gown/scrubs. Anecdotally, the ‘MRI gown selfie’ seemed to transcend age.”

During the course of his analysis, Hewis discovered that many patients took issue with the fact that they were not allowed to select the music they listened to during the MRI. “Music choice,” said Hewis, “is a simple intervention that can provide familiarity within a ‘terrifying’ environment.’ The findings of this study reinforce the ‘good practice’ of enabling patients’ choice of music, which may alleviate procedural anxiety.”

With such a broad reach, social networks like Twitter offer medical practitioners the opportunity to access previously unavailable information from their patients, which can help them continuously improve the MRI experience. “MRI patients do tweet about their experiences and these correlate with published findings employing more traditional participant recruitment methods,” concluded Hewis. “This study demonstrates the potential use of Twitter as a viable platform to conduct research into the patient experience within the medical radiation sciences.”

Media Contact

Chris Baumle
hmsmedia@elsevier.com
215-239-3731

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Schizophrenia Brain

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Curator

LPBI

 

http://health-innovations.org/2015/10/27/neuroimaging-matches-specific-schizophrenia-behaviour-to-the-brains-anatomy/

Neuroimaging studies using fMRI and PET to examine functional differences in brain activity in patients with schizophrenia have shown that differences seem to most commonly occur in the frontal lobes, hippocampus, and temporal lobes. These differences are heavily linked to the neurocognitive deficits which often occur with schizophrenia, particularly in areas of memory, attention, problem solving, executive function and social cognition.

Earlier studies from the researchers reported evidence suggesting that schizophrenia is not a single disease but a group of eight genetically distinct disorders, each with its own set of symptoms. Results found that distinct sets of genes were strongly associated with particular clinical symptoms.

The current study investigates the brain’s anatomy and shows that there are distinct subgroups of patients with a schizophrenia diagnosis that correlates with symptoms.  This also explains the difficulty in past studies to identify a single set of biomarkers for a single type of schizophrenia.

The current study evaluated scans taken with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and a technique called diffusion tensor imaging in 36 healthy volunteers and 47 people with schizophrenia. Results show that the scans of patients with schizophrenia had various abnormalities in portions of the corpus callosum, a bundle of fibers that connects the left and right hemispheres of the brain and is considered critical to neural communication. Characteristics across the corpus callosum revealed in the brain scans matched specific symptoms of schizophrenia. Patients with specific features in one part of the corpus callosum typically displayed bizarre and disorganized behaviour. In other patients, irregularities in a different part of that structure were associated with disorganized thinking and speech and symptoms such as a lack of emotion; other brain abnormalities in the corpus callosum were associated with delusions or hallucinations.  The lab conclude that their findings provide further evidence that schizophrenia is a heterogeneous group of disorders rather than a single disorder.

The team surmise that they didn’t start with people who had certain symptoms and then look to see whether they had corresponding abnormalities in the brain. They note that they just looked at the data, and the patterns began to emerge. They go ony to add that this kind of granular information, combined with data about the genetics of schizophrenia, one day will help physicians treat the disorder in a more precise way.

Many genes responsible for the creation of synaptic proteins have previously shown to be strongly linked to schizophrenia and other brain disorders, however, until now the reasons have not been understood.  Now, researchers from Cardiff University have identified a critical function of what they believe to be schizophrenia’s ‘Rosetta Stone’ gene that could hold the key to decoding the function of all genes involved in the disease.  The team state that the breakthrough has revealed a vulnerable period in the early stages of the brain’s development that they hope can be targeted for future efforts in reversing schizophrenia.  The study is published in the journal Science.

The gene identified in the current study is known as ‘disrupted in schizophrenia-1’ (DISC-1). Earlier studies have shown that when mutated, the gene is a high risk factor for mental illness including schizophrenia, major clinical depression and bipolar disorder.  The aim of the current study was to determine whether DISC-1’s interactions with other proteins early on in the brain’s development had a bearing on the brain’s ability to adapt its structure and function, also known as ‘plasticity’, later on in adulthood.

In order for healthy development of the brain’s synapses to take place, the DISC-1 gene first needs to bind with two other molecules known as ‘Lis’ and ‘Nudel’.  The experiments in mice revealed that by preventing DISC-1 from binding with these molecules prevents cortical neurons in the brain’s largest region from being able to form synapses.  The ability to form coherent thoughts and to properly perceive the world is damaged as a consequence of this.

Preventing DISC-1 from binding with ‘Lis’ and ‘Nudel’ molecules when the brain was fully formed had no effect on its plasticity. However, the researchers were able to pinpoint a seven-day window early on in the brain’s development, one week after birth, where failure to bind had an irreversible effect on the brain’s plasticity later on in life.

The researchers hypothesize that DISC-1 is schizophrenia’s Rosetta Stone gene and could hold the master key to help unlock the understanding of the role played by all risk genes involved in the disease.  They go on to add that they have identified a critical period during brain development that will assist in testing whether other schizophrenia risk genes affecting different regions of the brain create their malfunction during their own critical period.

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Peter Mueller, MD  Professor of Radiology @MGH & HMS – 2015 Synergy’s Honorary Award Recipient

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Synergy Announces the Honorary Award Recipient for 2015

Synergy 2015 Honors

Peter Mueller, MD

Professor of Radiology

Division Head, Interventional Radiology

Massachusetts General Hospital

Harvard Medical School

Boston, MA

Peter Mueller, MD

Peter Mueller, MD

Peter Mueller completed his medical training at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. After that he was a resident in radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Radiology, Boston, USA. In 1978 he started his interventional career in the GI radiology section at Massachusetts General Hospital. His mentor at that time was Joseph Ferrucci. Many of the procedures in non-vascular radiology, which are now considered routine, such as

  • percutaneous biopsy,
  • abscess drainage,
  • cholecystostomy,
  • gastrostomy,
  • biliary drainage,
  • benign biliary drainage and
  • percutaneous ablation of liver and renal tumours,

were either developed or further studied by the group of interventional radiologists that worked in this division. In the 1970s, 80s and 90s, the combination of imaging and intervention was just beginning and Prof. Mueller and his colleagues wrote many papers and gave many courses in these areas. His primary clinical and research interests are in interventional radiology, especially in biliary intervention, abscess drainage and percutaneous ablation of malignant tumours of the liver and kidney.

Over the years, Prof. Mueller has been intimately involved with novel techniques such as the Brown-Mueller T-Tack for use in percutaneous gastrostomy and percutaneous gastrojejunostomy and the Dawson-Mueller drainage catheter for fluid drainages. He has published well over 300 articles, several books and editorships, and given over 20 “named” lectures on interventional radiology. His Division of Abdominal Imaging and Interventional Radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital was one of the first in the United States to accept fellows from Europe, many of whom have gone on to distinguished careers in their homeland. This includes the recent President of CIRSE, Michael J. Lee.

More recently, he has become the Division Head of all Interventional Radiology at the MGH.

Prof. Mueller has been on the editorial boards of many radiology journals including

  • Radiology,
  • The American Journal of Roentgenology,
  • Clinical Radiology, and
  • Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiology.

He is the past Editor-in-Chief of Seminars in Interventional Radiology. He is the past President of the Society of Hepatobiliary Radiology, the New England Roentgen Ray Society, and the Society of Abdominal Radiology.

He has received an Honorary Membership of the European Society of Interventional Radiology and the European Radiology Society, Irish College of Medicine, the British College of Medicine and the Asian Society of Radiology.

He has received the Gold Medal from the British Interventional Radiology Society, and the Cardiovascular and Interventional Society of European Radiology (CIRSE); In addition, he has given the prestigious Dotter Lecture for the American Society of Interventional Radiology.

This year, Synergy honors Professor Mueller for his outstanding achievement and contribution to the field of Interventional Radiology.

 

SOURCE

From: Interventional Oncology 360 <newsletters@InterventionalOncology360.com>

Reply-To: <newsletters@InterventionalOncology360.com>

Date: Thursday, September 24, 2015 at 2:03 PM

To: Aviva Lev-Ari <AvivaLev-Ari@alum.berkeley.edu>

Subject: Synergy Announces the Honorary Award Recipient for 2015

Synergy 2015 – A Multidisciplinary Approach to Interventional Oncology

November 5-8, 2015, Eden Roc Hotel, Miami Beach, FL

This annual symposium offers attendees a review of a variety of oncological diseases combined with the latest developments in medical, interventional and surgical therapeutic options across multiple disciplines. A practical overview of how to incorporate emerging therapies into practice will be included with emphasis on the multidisciplinary approach needed to achieve the highest levels of success in the fight against cancer. New this year, is a one-day multidisciplinary symposium on Prostate Interventions (PAE) offering a comprehensive review on emerging topics and various aspects of Prostate Artery Embolization, combined with the latest developments in medical, surgical and interventional management of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia and Prostate cancer. Leading experts from national and international programs will present the latest data and treatment innovations for oncological challenges in multiple organ systems with emphasis on implementation from diagnosis to treatment. The meeting will be didactic and interactive with panel discussions and instructive case presentations focused on hepatocellular carcinoma, lung cancer, metastatic colorectal cancer, cholangiocarcinoma and liver metastases, renal and prostate cancer, pancreatic cancer, neuroendocrine, musculoskeletal tumors and palliative treatment options. A Nursing Symposium will also be presented on the last day of the conference.

 

Statement of Need

In the past few years, interventional oncology has evolved into an important subspecialty as more interventional radiologists are actively involved in the management of oncologic patients. Unlike other procedures handled by interventional radiologists, interventional oncology requires an in-depth understanding of the different types of cancers, current standards and proper use of treatment choices and working with a multidisciplinary group. Synergy 2015 will be a forum for the convergence of the expertise and knowledge of various specialists involved in oncologic care to promote better understanding and improved outcomes of patient care.

Target Audience

Interventional radiologists, oncologists, radiation oncologists, transplant and oncologic surgeons, hepatologists, gastroenterologists, urologists and nurse practitioners/nurses, technologists and allied healthcare professionals.

Learning Objectives

At the completion of the course, attendees will be able to: • Identify the current oncological problems faced in a variety of organ systems • Implement modern multidisciplinary techniques for diagnosis and intervention in the treatment of cancer • Incorporate modern interventional radiology therapeutic techniques in cancer treatment • Examine the basics of BPH and the current management guidelines • Assess prostatic arterial vasculature • Identify the current status and challenges with Prostate Artery Embolization in the management of BPH and prostate cancer • Implement modern multidisciplinary techniques for diagnosis and intervention in the management of BPH

Accreditation

The University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

AGENDA

http://synergymiami.org/media/Synergy-2015-Brochure-2015-09-11.pdf

SOURCE

http://synergymiami.org/media/Synergy-2015-Brochure-2015-09-11.pdf

 

 

 

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Low-dose and High-resolution Cardiac Imaging with Revolution™ CT

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

GE Healthcare Case study Low-dose and High-resolution Cardiac Imaging with Revolution™ CT

Prof. Philipp A. Kaufmann, M.D. Ronny R. Buechel, M.D. Fran Mikulicic, M.D. Dominik C. Benz, M.D. University of Zürich, Department of Nuclear Medicine, Switzerland

VIEW IMAGES

http://14-1248-3.10.auntminnie.com/?muid=10723000

Three Case Studies:

  • Detailed and Reliable Stenosis Detection in One Heart Beat
  • Rapid Exclusion of CAD with Ultra-low-dose CCTA
  • Congenital Anomalous Course of Left Coronary Artery C

SOURCE

http://14-1248-3.10.auntminnie.com/?muid=10723000

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High Concordance Between Mental Stress-Induced and Adenosine-Induced Myocardial Ischemia Assessed Using SPECT in Heart Failure Patients: Hemodynami… – PubMed – NCBI

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

J Nucl Med. 2015 Jul 23. pii: jnumed.115.157990. [Epub ahead of print]

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

See on Scoop.itCardiovascular and vascular imaging

High Concordance Between Mental Stress-Induced and Adenosine-Induced Myocardial Ischemia Assessed Using SPECT in Heart Failure Patients: Hemodynamic and Biomarker Correlates

Affiliations 

Free PMC article

Abstract

Mental stress can trigger myocardial ischemia, but the prevalence of mental stress-induced ischemia in congestive heart failure (CHF) patients is unknown. We characterized mental stress-induced and adenosine-induced changes in myocardial perfusion and neurohormonal activation in CHF patients with reduced left-ventricular function using SPECT to precisely quantify segment-level myocardial perfusion.

Methods: Thirty-four coronary artery disease patients (mean age±SD, 62±10 y) with CHF longer than 3 mo and ejection fraction less than 40% underwent both adenosine and mental stress myocardial perfusion SPECT on consecutive days. Mental stress consisted of anger recall (anger-provoking speech) followed by subtraction of serial sevens. The presence and extent of myocardial ischemia was quantified using the conventional 17-segment model.

Results: Sixty-eight percent of patients had 1 ischemic segment or more during mental stress and 81% during adenosine. On segment-by-segment analysis, perfusion with mental stress and adenosine were highly correlated. No significant differences were found between any 2 time points for B-type natriuretic peptide, tumor necrosis factor-α, IL-1b, troponin, vascular endothelin growth factor, IL-17a, matrix metallopeptidase-9, or C-reactive protein. However, endothelin-1 and IL-6 increased, and IL-10 decreased, between the stressor and 30 min after stress. Left-ventricular end diastolic dimension was 179±65 mL at rest and increased to 217±71 after mental stress and 229±86 after adenosine (P<0.01 for both). Resting end systolic volume was 129±60 mL at rest and increased to 158±66 after mental stress (P<0.05) and 171±87 after adenosine (P<0.07), with no significant differences between adenosine and mental stress. Ejection fraction was 30±12 at baseline, 29±11 with mental stress, and 28±10 with adenosine (P=not significant).

Conclusion: There was high concordance between ischemic perfusion defects induced by adenosine and mental stress, suggesting that mental stress is equivalent to pharmacologic stress in eliciting clinically significant myocardial perfusion defects in CHF patients. Cardiac dilatation suggests clinically important changes with both conditions. Psychosocial stressors during daily life may contribute to the ischemic burden of CHF patients with coronary artery disease.

Keywords: adenosine; heart failure; ischemia; mental stress; myocardial perfusion; single-photon emission computed tomography.

SOURCE

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26205303/

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Imaging Technology in Cancer Surgery

Author and curator: Dror Nir, PhD

The advent of medical-imaging technologies such as image-fusion, functional-imaging and noninvasive tissue characterisation is playing an imperative role in answering this demand thus transforming the concept of personalized medicine in cancer into practice. The leading modality in that respect is medical imaging. To date, the main imaging systems that can provide reasonable level of cancer detection and localization are: CT, mammography, Multi-Sequence MRI, PET/CT and ultrasound. All of these require skilled operators and experienced imaging interpreters in order to deliver what is required at a reasonable level. It is generally agreed by radiologists and oncologists that in order to provide a comprehensive work-flow that complies with the principles of personalized medicine, future cancer patients’ management will heavily rely on computerized image interpretation applications that will extract from images in a standardized manner measurable imaging biomarkers leading to better clinical assessment of cancer patients.

As consequence of the human genome project and technological advances in gene-sequencing, the understanding of cancer advanced considerably. This led to increase in the offering of treatment options. Yet, surgical resection is still the leading form of therapy offered to patients with organ confined tumors. Obtaining “cancer free” surgical margins is crucial to the surgery outcome in terms of overall survival and patients’ quality of life/morbidity. Currently, a significant portion of surgeries ends up with positive surgical margins leading to poor clinical outcome and increase of costs. To improve on this, large variety of intraoperative imaging-devices aimed at resection-guidance have been introduced and adapted in the last decade and it is expected that this trend will continue.

The Status of Contemporary Image-Guided Modalities in Oncologic Surgery is a review paper presenting a variety of cancer imaging techniques that have been adapted or developed for intra-operative surgical guidance. It also covers novel, cancer-specific contrast agents that are in early stage development and demonstrate significant promise to improve real-time detection of sub-clinical cancer in operative setting.

Another good (free access) review paper is: uPAR-targeted multimodal tracer for pre- and intraoperative imaging in cancer surgery

Abstract

Pre- and intraoperative diagnostic techniques facilitating tumor staging are of paramount importance in colorectal cancer surgery. The urokinase receptor (uPAR) plays an important role in the development of cancer, tumor invasion, angiogenesis, and metastasis and over-expression is found in the majority of carcinomas. This study aims to develop the first clinically relevant anti-uPAR antibody-based imaging agent that combines nuclear (111In) and real-time near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent imaging (ZW800-1). Conjugation and binding capacities were investigated and validated in vitro using spectrophotometry and cell-based assays. In vivo, three human colorectal xenograft models were used including an orthotopic peritoneal carcinomatosis model to image small tumors. Nuclear and NIR fluorescent signals showed clear tumor delineation between 24h and 72h post-injection, with highest tumor-to-background ratios of 5.0 ± 1.3 at 72h using fluorescence and 4.2 ± 0.1 at 24h with radioactivity. 1-2 mm sized tumors could be clearly recognized by their fluorescent rim. This study showed the feasibility of an uPAR-recognizing multimodal agent to visualize tumors during image-guided resections using NIR fluorescence, whereas its nuclear component assisted in the pre-operative non-invasive recognition of tumors using SPECT imaging. This strategy can assist in surgical planning and subsequent precision surgery to reduce the number of incomplete resections.

INTRODUCTION
Diagnosis, staging, and surgical planning of colorectal cancer patients increasingly rely on imaging techniques that provide information about tumor biology and anatomical structures [1-3]. Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET) are preoperative nuclear imaging modalities used to provide insights into tumor location, tumor biology, and the surrounding micro-environment [4]. Both techniques depend on the recognition of tumor cells using radioactive ligands. Various monoclonal antibodies, initially developed as therapeutic agents (e.g. cetuximab, bevacizumab, labetuzumab), are labeled with radioactive tracers and evaluated for pre-operative imaging purposes [5-9]. Despite these techniques, during surgery the surgeons still rely mostly on their eyes and hands to distinguish healthy from malignant tissues, resulting in incomplete resections or unnecessary tissue removal in up to 27% of rectal cancer patients [10, 11]. Incomplete resections (R1) are shown to be a strong predictor of development of distant metastasis, local recurrence, and decreased survival of colorectal cancer patients [11, 12]. Fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) is an intraoperative imaging technique already introduced and validated in the clinic for sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping and biliary imaging [13]. Tumor-specific FGS can be regarded as an extension of SPECT/PET, using fluorophores instead of radioactive labels conjugated to tumor-specific ligands, but with higher spatial resolution than SPECT/PET imaging and real-time anatomical feedback [14]. A powerful synergy can be achieved when nuclear and fluorescent imaging modalities are combined, extending the nuclear diagnostic images with real-time intraoperative imaging. This combination can lead to improved diagnosis and management by integrating pre-intra and postoperative imaging. Nuclear imaging enables pre-operative evaluation of tumor spread while during surgery deeper lying spots can be localized using the gamma probe counter. The (NIR) fluorescent signal aids the surgeon in providing real-time anatomical feedback to accurately recognize and resect malignant tissues. Postoperative, malignant cells can be recognized using NIR fluorescent microscopy. Clinically, the advantages of multimodal agents in image-guided surgery have been shown in patients with melanoma and prostate cancer, but those studies used a-specific agents, following the natural lymph drainage pattern of colloidal tracers after peritumoral injection [15, 16]. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) is implicated in many aspects of tumor growth and (micro) metastasis [17, 18]. The levels of uPAR are undetectable in normal tissues except for occasional macrophages and granulocytes in the uterus, thymus, kidneys and spleen [19]. Enhanced tumor levels of uPAR and its circulating form (suPAR) are independent prognostic markers for overall survival in colorectal cancer patients [20, 21]. The relatively selective and high overexpression of uPAR in a wide range of human cancers including colorectal, breast, and pancreas nominate uPAR as a widely applicable and potent molecular target [17,22]. The current study aims to develop a clinically relevant uPAR-specific multimodal agent that can be used to visualize tumors pre- and intraoperatively after a single injection. We combined the 111Indium isotope with NIR fluorophore ZW800-1 using a hybrid linker to an uPAR specific monoclonal antibody (ATN-658) and evaluated its performance using a pre-clinical SPECT system (U-SPECT-II) and a clinically-applied NIR fluorescence camera system (FLARE™).

Fig1 Fig2 Fig3

Robotic surgery is a growing trend as a form of surgery, specifically in urology. The following review paper propose a good discussion on the added value of imaging in urologic robotic surgery:

The current and future use of imaging in urological robotic surgery: a survey of the European Association of Robotic Urological Surgeons

 Abstract

Background

With the development of novel augmented reality operating platforms the way surgeons utilize imaging as a real-time adjunct to surgical technique is changing.

Methods

A questionnaire was distributed via the European Robotic Urological Society mailing list. The questionnaire had three themes: surgeon demographics, current use of imaging and potential uses of an augmented reality operating environment in robotic urological surgery.

Results

117 of the 239 respondents (48.9%) were independently practicing robotic surgeons. 74% of surgeons reported having imaging available in theater for prostatectomy 97% for robotic partial nephrectomy and 95% cystectomy. 87% felt there was a role for augmented reality as a navigation tool in robotic surgery.

Conclusions

This survey has revealed the contemporary robotic surgeon to be comfortable in the use of imaging for intraoperative planning it also suggests that there is a desire for augmented reality platforms within the urological community. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

 Introduction

Since Röntgen first utilized X-rays to image the carpal bones of the human hand in 1895, medical imaging has evolved and is now able to provide a detailed representation of a patient’s intracorporeal anatomy, with recent advances now allowing for 3-dimensional (3D) reconstructions. The visualization of anatomy in 3D has been shown to improve the ability to localize structures when compared with 2D with no change in the amount of cognitive loading [1]. This has allowed imaging to move from a largely diagnostic tool to one that can be used for both diagnosis and operative planning.

One potential interface to display 3D images, to maximize its potential as a tool for surgical guidance, is to overlay them onto the endoscopic operative scene (augmented reality). This addresses, in part, a criticism often leveled at robotic surgery, the loss of haptic feedback. Augmented reality has the potential to mitigate this sensory loss by enhancing the surgeons visual cues with information regarding subsurface anatomical relationships [2].

Augmented reality surgery is in its infancy for intra-abdominal procedures due in large part to the difficulties of applying static preoperative imaging to a constantly deforming intraoperative scene [3]. There are case reports and ex vivo studies in the literature examining the technology in minimal access prostatectomy [3-6] and partial nephrectomy [7-10], but there remains a lack of evidence determining whether surgeons feel there is a role for the technology and if so for what procedures they feel it would be efficacious.

This questionnaire-based study was designed to assess first, the pre- and intra-operative imaging modalities utilized by robotic urologists; second, the current use of imaging intraoperatively for surgical planning; and finally whether there is a desire for augmented reality among the robotic urological community.

Methods

Recruitment

A web based survey instrument was designed and sent out, as part of a larger survey, to members of the EAU robotic urology section (ERUS). Only independently practicing robotic surgeons performing robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP), robot-assisted partial nephrectomy (RAPN) and/or robotic cystectomy were included in the analysis, those surgeons exclusively performing other procedures were excluded. Respondents were offered no incentives to reply. All data collected was anonymous.

Survey design and administration

The questionnaire was created using the LimeSurvey platform (www.limesurvey.com) and hosted on their website. All responses (both complete and incomplete) were included in the analysis. The questionnaire was dynamic with the questions displayed tailored to the respondents’ previous answers.

When computing fractions or percentages the denominator was the number of respondents to answer the question, this number is variable due to the dynamic nature of the questionnaire.

Demographics

All respondents to the survey were asked in what country they practiced and what robotic urological procedures they performed. In addition to what procedures they performed surgeons were asked to specify the number of cases they had undertaken for each procedure.

 Current imaging practice

Procedure-specific questions in this group were displayed according to the operations the respondent performed. A summary of the questions can be seen in Appendix 1. Procedure-nonspecific questions were also asked. Participants were asked whether they routinely used the Tile Pro™ function of the da Vinci console (Intuitive Surgical, Sunnyvale, USA) and whether they routinely viewed imaging intra-operatively.

 Augmented reality

Before answering questions in this section, participants were invited to watch a video demonstrating an augmented reality platform during RAPN, performed by our group at Imperial College London. A still from this video can be seen in Figure 1. They were then asked whether they felt augmented reality would be of use as a navigation or training tool in robotic surgery.

f1

Figure 1. A still taken from a video of augmented reality robot assisted partial nephrectomy performed. Here the tumour has been painted into the operative view allowing the surgeon to appreciate the relationship of the tumour with the surface of the kidney

Once again, in this section, procedure-specific questions were displayed according to the operations the respondent performed. Only those respondents who felt augmented reality would be of use as a navigation tool were asked procedure-specific questions. Questions were asked to establish where in these procedures they felt an augmented reality environment would be of use.

Results

Demographics

Of the 239 respondents completing the survey 117 were independently practising robotic surgeons and were therefore eligible for analysis. The majority of the surgeons had both trained (210/239, 87.9%) and worked in Europe (215/239, 90%). The median number of cases undertaken by those surgeons reporting their case volume was: 120 (6–2000), 9 (1–120) and 30 (1–270), for RALP, robot assisted cystectomy and RAPN, respectively.

 

Contemporary use of imaging in robotic surgery

When enquiring about the use of imaging for surgical planning, the majority of surgeons (57%, 65/115) routinely viewed pre-operative imaging intra-operatively with only 9% (13/137) routinely capitalizing on the TilePro™ function in the console to display these images. When assessing the use of TilePro™ among surgeons who performed RAPN 13.8% (9/65) reported using the technology routinely.

When assessing the imaging modalities that are available to a surgeon in theater the majority of surgeons performing RALP (74%, 78/106)) reported using MRI with an additional 37% (39/106) reporting the use of CT for pre-operative staging and/or planning. For surgeons performing RAPN and robot-assisted cystectomy there was more of a consensus with 97% (68/70) and 95% (54/57) of surgeons, respectively, using CT for routine preoperative imaging (Table 1).

Table 1. Which preoperative imaging modalities do you use for diagnosis and surgical planning?

  CT MRI USS None Other
RALP (n = 106) 39.8% 73.5% 2% 15.1% 8.4%
(39) (78) (3) (16) (9)
RAPN (n = 70) 97.1% 42.9% 17.1% 0% 2.9%
(68) (30) (12) (0) (2)
Cystectomy (n = 57) 94.7% 26.3% 1.8% 1.8% 5.3%
(54) (15) (1) (1) (3)

Those surgeons performing RAPN were found to have the most diversity in the way they viewed pre-operative images in theater, routinely viewing images in sagittal, coronal and axial slices (Table 2). The majority of these surgeons also viewed the images as 3D reconstructions (54%, 38/70).

Table 2. How do you typically view preoperative imaging in the OR? 3D recons = three-dimensional reconstructions

  Axial slices (n) Coronal slices (n) Sagittal slices (n) 3D recons. (n) Do not view (n)  
RALP (n = 106) 49.1% 44.3% 31.1% 9.4% 31.1%
(52) (47) (33) (10) (33)
RAPN (n = 70) 68.6% 74.3% 60% (42) 54.3% 0%
(48) (52) (38) (0)
Cystectomy (n = 57) 70.2% 52.6% 50.9% 21.1% 8.8%
(40) (30) (29) (12) (5)

The majority of surgeons used ultrasound intra-operatively in RAPN (51%, 35/69) with a further 25% (17/69) reporting they would use it if they had access to a ‘drop-in’ ultrasound probe (Figure 2).

f2

Figure 2. Chart demonstrating responses to the question – Do you use intraoperative ultrasound for robotic partial nephrectomy?

Desire for augmented reality

Overall, 87% of respondents envisaged a role for augmented reality as a navigation tool in robotic surgery and 82% (88/107) felt that there was an additional role for the technology as a training tool.

The greatest desire for augmented reality was among those surgeons performing RAPN with 86% (54/63) feeling the technology would be of use. The largest group of surgeons felt it would be useful in identifying tumour location, with significant numbers also feeling it would be efficacious in tumor resection (Figure 3).

f3

Figure 3. Chart demonstrating responses to the question – In robotic partial nephrectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay would be of assistance?

When enquiring about the potential for augmented reality in RALP, 79% (20/96) of respondents felt it would be of use during the procedure, with the largest group feeling it would be helpful for nerve sparing 65% (62/96) (Figure 4). The picture in cystectomy was similar with 74% (37/50) of surgeons believing augmented reality would be of use, with both nerve sparing and apical dissection highlighted as specific examples (40%, 20/50) (Figure 5). The majority also felt that it would be useful for lymph node dissection in both RALP and robot assisted cystectomy (55% (52/95) and 64% (32/50), respectively).

f4

Figure 4. Chart demonstrating responses to the question – In robotic prostatectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay would be of assistance?

f5

Figure 5. Chart demonstrating responses to the question – In robotic cystectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality overlay technology would be of assistance?

Discussion

The results from this study suggest that the contemporary robotic surgeon views imaging as an important adjunct to operative practice. The way these images are being viewed is changing; although the majority of surgeons continue to view images as two-dimensional (2D) slices a significant minority have started to capitalize on 3D reconstructions to give them an improved appreciation of the patient’s anatomy.

This study has highlighted surgeons’ willingness to take the next step in the utilization of imaging in operative planning, augmented reality, with 87% feeling it has a role to play in robotic surgery. Although there appears to be a considerable desire for augmented reality, the technology itself is still in its infancy with the limited evidence demonstrating clinical application reporting only qualitative results [3, 7, 11, 12].

There are a number of significant issues that need to be overcome before augmented reality can be adopted in routine clinical practice. The first of these is registration (the process by which two images are positioned in the same coordinate system such that the locations of corresponding points align [13]). This process has been performed both manually and using automated algorithms with varying degrees of accuracy [2, 14]. The second issue pertains to the use of static pre-operative imaging in a dynamic operative environment; in order for the pre-operative imaging to be accurately registered it must be deformable. This problem remains as yet unresolved.

Live intra-operative imaging circumvents the problems of tissue deformation and in RAPN 51% of surgeons reported already using intra-operative ultrasound to aid in tumour resection. Cheung and colleagues [9] have published an ex vivo study highlighting the potential for intra-operative ultrasound in augmented reality partial nephrectomy. They report the overlaying of ultrasound onto the operative scene to improve the surgeon’s appreciation of the subsurface tumour anatomy, this improvement in anatomical appreciation resulted in improved resection quality over conventional ultrasound guided resection [9]. Building on this work the first in vivo use of overlaid ultrasound in RAPN has recently been reported [10]. Although good subjective feedback was received from the operating surgeon, the study was limited to a single case demonstrating feasibility and as such was not able to show an outcome benefit to the technology [10].

RAPN also appears to be the area in which augmented reality would be most readily adopted with 86% of surgeons claiming they see a use for the technology during the procedure. Within this operation there are two obvious steps to augmentation, anatomical identification (in particular vessel identification to facilitate both routine ‘full clamping’ and for the identification of secondary and tertiary vessels for ‘selective clamping’ [15]) and tumour resection. These two phases have different requirements from an augmented reality platform; the first phase of identification requires a gross overview of the anatomy without the need for high levels of registration accuracy. Tumor resection, however, necessitates almost sub-millimeter accuracy in registration and needs the system to account for the dynamic intra-operative environment. The step of anatomical identification is amenable to the use of non-deformable 3D reconstructions of pre-operative imaging while that of image-guided tumor resection is perhaps better suited to augmentation with live imaging such as ultrasound [2, 9, 16].

For RALP and robot-assisted cystectomy the steps in which surgeons felt augmented reality would be of assistance were those of neurovascular bundle preservation and apical dissection. The relative, perceived, efficacy of augmented reality in these steps correlate with previous examinations of augmented reality in RALP [17, 18]. Although surgeon preference for utilizing augmented reality while undertaking robotic prostatectomy has been demonstrated, Thompson et al. failed to demonstrate an improvement in oncological outcomes in those patients undergoing AR RALP [18].

Both nerve sparing and apical dissection require a high level of registration accuracy and a necessity for either live imaging or the deformation of pre-operative imaging to match the operative scene; achieving this level of registration accuracy is made more difficult by the mobilization of the prostate gland during the operation [17]. These problems are equally applicable to robot-assisted cystectomy. Although guidance systems have been proposed in the literature for RALP [3-5, 12, 17], none have achieved the level of accuracy required to provide assistance during nerve sparing. In addition, there are still imaging challenges that need to be overcome. Although multiparametric MRI has been shown to improve decision making in opting for a nerve sparing approach to RALP [19] the imaging is not yet able to reliably discern the exact location of the neurovascular bundle. This said, significant advances are being made with novel imaging modalities on the horizon that may allow for imaging of the neurovascular bundle in the near future [20].

 

Limitations

The number of operations included represents a significant limitation of the study, had different index procedures been chosen different results may have been seen. This being said the index procedures selected were chosen as they represent the vast majority of uro-oncological robotic surgical practice, largely mitigating for this shortfall.

Although the available ex vivo evidence suggests that introducing augmented reality operating environments into surgical practice would help to improve outcomes [9, 21] the in vivo experience to date is limited to small volume case series reporting feasibility [2, 3, 14]. To date no study has demonstrated an in vivo outcome advantage to augmented reality guidance. In addition to this limitation augmented reality has been demonstrated to increased rates of inattention blindness among surgeons suggesting there is a trade-off between increasing visual information and the surgeon’s ability to appreciate unexpected operative events [21].

 

Conclusions

This survey shows the contemporary robotic surgeon to be comfortable with the use of imaging to aid intra-operative planning; furthermore it highlights a significant interest among the urological community in augmented reality operating platforms.

Short- to medium-term development of augmented reality systems in robotic urology surgery would be best performed using RAPN as the index procedure. Not only was this the operation where surgeons saw the greatest potential benefits, but it may also be the operation where it is most easily achievable by capitalizing on the respective benefits of technologies the surgeons are already using; pre-operative CT for anatomical identification and intra-operative ultrasound for tumour resection.

 

Conflict of interest

None of the authors have any conflicts of interest to declare.

Appendix 1

Question Asked Question Type
Demographics
In which country do you usually practise? Single best answer
Which robotic procedures do you perform?* Single best answer
Current Imaging Practice
What preoperative imaging modalities do you use for the staging and surgical planning in renal cancer? Multiple choice
How do you typically view preoperative imaging in theatre for renal cancer surgery? Multiple choice
Do you use intraoperative ultrasound for partial nephrectomy? Yes or No
What preoperative imaging modalities do you use for the staging and surgical planning in prostate cancer? Multiple choice
How do you typically view preoperative imaging in theatre for prostate cancer? Multiple choice
Do you use intraoperative ultrasound for robotic partial nephrectomy? Yes or No
Which preoperative imaging modality do you use for staging and surgical planning in muscle invasive TCC? Multiple choice
How do you typically view preoperative imaging in theatre for muscle invasive TCC? Multiple choice
Do you routinely refer to preoperative imaging intraoperativley? Yes or No
Do you routinely use Tilepro intraoperativley? Yes or No
Augmented Reality
Do you feel there is a role for augmented reality as a navigation tool in robotic surgery? Yes or No
Do you feel there is a role for augmented reality as a training tool in robotic surgery? Yes or No
In robotic partial nephrectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay technology would be of assistance? Multiple choice
In robotic nephrectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay technology would be of assistance? Multiple choice
In robotic prostatectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay technology would be of assistance? Multiple choice
Would augmented reality guidance be of use in lymph node dissection in robotic prostatectomy? Yes or No
In robotic cystectomy which parts of the operation do you feel augmented reality image overlay technology would be of assistance? Multiple choice
Would augmented reality guidance be of use in lymph node dissection in robotic cystectomy? Yes or No
*The relevant procedure related questions were displayed based on the answer to this question

References

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