Paper
24 February 2012 Breast ultrasound tomography: bridging the gap to clinical practice
Neb Duric, Peter Littrup, Cuiping Li, Olivier Roy, Steven Schmidt, Roman Janer, Xiaoyang Cheng, Jeffrey Goll, Olsi Rama, Lisa Bey-Knight, William Greenway
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Conventional sonography, which performs well in dense breast tissue and is comfortable and radiation-free, is not practical for screening because of its operator dependence and the time needed to scan the whole breast. While magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can significantly improve on these limitations, it is also not practical because it has long been prohibitively expensive for routine use. There is therefore a need for an alternative breast imaging method that obviates the constraints of these standard imaging modalities. The lack of such an alternative is a barrier to dramatically impacting mortality (about 45,000 women in the US per year) and morbidity from breast cancer because, currently, there is a trade-off between the cost effectiveness of mammography and sonography on the one hand and the imaging accuracy of MRI on the other. This paper presents a progress report on our long term goal to eliminate this trade-off and thereby improve breast cancer survival rates and decrease unnecessary biopsies through the introduction of safe, cost-effective, operatorindependent sonography that can rival MRI in accuracy. The objective of the study described in this paper was to design and build an improved ultrasound tomography (UST) scanner in support of our goals. To that end, we report on a design that builds on our current research prototype. The design of the new scanner is based on a comparison of the capabilities of our existing prototype and the performance needed for clinical efficacy. The performance gap was quantified by using clinical studies to establish the baseline performance of the research prototype, and using known MRI capabilities to establish the required performance. Simulation software was used to determine the basic operating characteristics of an improved scanner that would provide the necessary performance. Design elements focused on transducer geometry, which in turn drove the data acquisition system and the image reconstruction engine specifications. The feasibility of UST established by our earlier work and that of other groups, forms the rationale for developing a UST system that has the potential to become a practical, low-cost device for breast cancer screening and diagnosis.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Neb Duric, Peter Littrup, Cuiping Li, Olivier Roy, Steven Schmidt, Roman Janer, Xiaoyang Cheng, Jeffrey Goll, Olsi Rama, Lisa Bey-Knight, and William Greenway "Breast ultrasound tomography: bridging the gap to clinical practice", Proc. SPIE 8320, Medical Imaging 2012: Ultrasonic Imaging, Tomography, and Therapy, 83200O (24 February 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.910988
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CITATIONS
Cited by 21 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Breast

Prototyping

Scanners

Breast cancer

Magnetic resonance imaging

Transducers

Cancer

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