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To improve Lung Cancer Diagnosis, good
medicine is a polymer pill
Newswise, April 2010 — Doctors may soon be
able to diagnose lung cancer more
effectively thanks to research performed at
the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST), where scientists have
found ways both to increase the accuracy of
computed tomography (CT) scans and to lessen
the amount of time necessary to perceive
telltale changes in lung tissue.
For years, radiologists have determined the
size of potentially cancerous lung nodules
by measuring the largest distance across
them as displayed on a computer screen in
two dimensions.
A method called RECIST is widely used for
this purpose, but some members of the
research community have suggested that
three-dimensional analysis, or volumetrics,
may provide a better way to determine the
size of the nodules.
Recently, a NIST team quantified this
improvement: Volumetrics could allow
physicians to notice volume changes that are
up to 10 times smaller than RECIST can,
potentially cutting diagnosis time from six
months to four weeks—a critical difference
in terms of a patient's chance of survival.
CT scans combine a series of X-ray views
taken from many different angles to produce
cross-sectional images of the body, but
there are several approaches to interpreting
scan data, so NIST's Zachary Levine set out
to determine which was best by creating a
set of reference objects that could mimic
potential lung tumors.
His team measured 283 polymer-silicate
ellipsoids of precise volume that resemble
pills ranging from four to 11 mm in
diameter.
"For diagnosis in the earliest stage of
cancer, other studies have shown this is the
size of nodule you want to be looking at,"
says Levine.
The team encased the mimics in foam rubber
and put them into layered racks of a box
akin to one that holds fishing tackle.
Because foam appears transparent to the CT
reconstruction, in a scan the denser mimics
look very much like tumors.
The team was then able to compare their
ellipsoids' known volumes with what the
volumetrics and RECIST methods indicated
from the scan data.
"We found that volumetrics allows you to
notice volume changes that are a factor of
10 smaller than RECIST can with a similar
level of confidence," Levine says.
"This implies that you could notice
life-threatening changes from a follow-up
scan performed only weeks after the first,
instead of months."
Levine cautions that cancers often grow in
strange shapes not resembling elliptical
pills which can make a diagnosis more
difficult, but that the study was a good
start toward improving data interpretation.
"Our work only applies to the simplest of
cases, but it's still a large class of lung
cancers," he says.
* Z.H. Levine, B.R. Borchardt, N.J.
Brandenburg, C.W. Clark, B. Muralikrishnan,
C.M. Shakarji, J.J. Chen, and E.L. Siegel.
RECIST vs. Volume Measurement in Medical CT
Using Ellipsoids of Known Size. Optics
Express, Vol. 18, Issue 8, pp. 8151, 2010.
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