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Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment

A calibrated palpation sensor has been developed for making instrumented Digital Rectal Examinations (iDREs) with a view to assessing patients for prostate cancer. The instrument measures the dynamic stiffness of the palpable surface of the prostate, and has been trialled on 12 patients in vivo. The...

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Autores principales: Reuben, Robert L, Hammer, Steven J, Johnson, Olufemi, Good, Daniel W, Palacio-Torralba, Javier, Candito, Antonio, Chen, Yuhang, Phipps, Simon, Shu, Will, McNeill, S Alan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10251469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37062899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09544119231154305
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author Reuben, Robert L
Hammer, Steven J
Johnson, Olufemi
Good, Daniel W
Palacio-Torralba, Javier
Candito, Antonio
Chen, Yuhang
Phipps, Simon
Shu, Will
McNeill, S Alan
author_facet Reuben, Robert L
Hammer, Steven J
Johnson, Olufemi
Good, Daniel W
Palacio-Torralba, Javier
Candito, Antonio
Chen, Yuhang
Phipps, Simon
Shu, Will
McNeill, S Alan
author_sort Reuben, Robert L
collection PubMed
description A calibrated palpation sensor has been developed for making instrumented Digital Rectal Examinations (iDREs) with a view to assessing patients for prostate cancer. The instrument measures the dynamic stiffness of the palpable surface of the prostate, and has been trialled on 12 patients in vivo. The patients had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and were scheduled for radical prostatectomy. As far as possible, patients with asymmetric disease were chosen so as to give a variation in gland condition over the palpable surface. The device works by applying an oscillating pressure (force) to a flexible probe whose displacement into the tissue is also measured in order to yield a dynamic stiffness, the static stiffness being incidentally measured at the mean oscillatory force. The device was deployed mounted on the index finger of a urologist and measurements taken at 12–16 positions on each patient using light and firm pressure and palpation frequencies of 1 or 5 Hz. In parallel, conventional DRE assessments were made by a consultant urologist for cancer. After in vivo measurement, the glands were removed and examined histologically with each palpation point being classified as cancerous (C) or not (NC). The work has established the first measurements of static modulus of living prostate tissue to be: 26.8 (13.3) kPa for tissue affected by prostate cancer (C classification), and 24.8 kPa (11.9) for tissue unaffected by cancer (NC classification), values quoted as median (interquartile range). The dynamic properties were characterised by: dynamic modulus, 5.15 kPa (4.86) for the C classification and 4.61 kPa (3.08) for the NC classification and the time lag between force and displacement at 5 Hz palpation frequency, 0.0175 s (0.0078) for the C classification and 0.0186 s (0.0397) for the NC classification, values again quoted as median (interquartile range). With the limited set of features that could be generated, an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) classification yielded a sensitivity of 97%, negative predictive value of 86%, positive predictive value of 67% and accuracy of 70% but with relatively poor specificity (30%). Besides extending the feature set, there are a number of changes in probe design, probing strategy and in mechanics analysis, which are expected to improve the diagnostic capabilities of the method.
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spelling pubmed-102514692023-06-10 Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment Reuben, Robert L Hammer, Steven J Johnson, Olufemi Good, Daniel W Palacio-Torralba, Javier Candito, Antonio Chen, Yuhang Phipps, Simon Shu, Will McNeill, S Alan Proc Inst Mech Eng H Original Articles A calibrated palpation sensor has been developed for making instrumented Digital Rectal Examinations (iDREs) with a view to assessing patients for prostate cancer. The instrument measures the dynamic stiffness of the palpable surface of the prostate, and has been trialled on 12 patients in vivo. The patients had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and were scheduled for radical prostatectomy. As far as possible, patients with asymmetric disease were chosen so as to give a variation in gland condition over the palpable surface. The device works by applying an oscillating pressure (force) to a flexible probe whose displacement into the tissue is also measured in order to yield a dynamic stiffness, the static stiffness being incidentally measured at the mean oscillatory force. The device was deployed mounted on the index finger of a urologist and measurements taken at 12–16 positions on each patient using light and firm pressure and palpation frequencies of 1 or 5 Hz. In parallel, conventional DRE assessments were made by a consultant urologist for cancer. After in vivo measurement, the glands were removed and examined histologically with each palpation point being classified as cancerous (C) or not (NC). The work has established the first measurements of static modulus of living prostate tissue to be: 26.8 (13.3) kPa for tissue affected by prostate cancer (C classification), and 24.8 kPa (11.9) for tissue unaffected by cancer (NC classification), values quoted as median (interquartile range). The dynamic properties were characterised by: dynamic modulus, 5.15 kPa (4.86) for the C classification and 4.61 kPa (3.08) for the NC classification and the time lag between force and displacement at 5 Hz palpation frequency, 0.0175 s (0.0078) for the C classification and 0.0186 s (0.0397) for the NC classification, values again quoted as median (interquartile range). With the limited set of features that could be generated, an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) classification yielded a sensitivity of 97%, negative predictive value of 86%, positive predictive value of 67% and accuracy of 70% but with relatively poor specificity (30%). Besides extending the feature set, there are a number of changes in probe design, probing strategy and in mechanics analysis, which are expected to improve the diagnostic capabilities of the method. SAGE Publications 2023-04-16 2023-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10251469/ /pubmed/37062899 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09544119231154305 Text en © IMechE 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Lficense (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Articles
Reuben, Robert L
Hammer, Steven J
Johnson, Olufemi
Good, Daniel W
Palacio-Torralba, Javier
Candito, Antonio
Chen, Yuhang
Phipps, Simon
Shu, Will
McNeill, S Alan
Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title_full Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title_fullStr Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title_short Mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using Dynamic Instrumented Palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
title_sort mechanical mapping of the prostate in vivo using dynamic instrumented palpation; towards an in vivo strategy for cancer assessment
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10251469/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37062899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09544119231154305
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