Cargando…

The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz

OBJECTIVE: Cancer cells exhibit altered local dielectric properties compared to normal cells. These properties are measurable as a difference in electrical conductance using electrical impedance scanning (EIS). EIS is at present not sufficiently accurate for clinical routine despite its technologica...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Malich, A, Scholz, B, Kott, A, Facius, M, Fischer, DR, Freesmeyer, MG
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Biomedical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Malaysia 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3097686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21614295
http://dx.doi.org/10.2349/biij.3.4.e33
_version_ 1782203868108554240
author Malich, A
Scholz, B
Kott, A
Facius, M
Fischer, DR
Freesmeyer, MG
author_facet Malich, A
Scholz, B
Kott, A
Facius, M
Fischer, DR
Freesmeyer, MG
author_sort Malich, A
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Cancer cells exhibit altered local dielectric properties compared to normal cells. These properties are measurable as a difference in electrical conductance using electrical impedance scanning (EIS). EIS is at present not sufficiently accurate for clinical routine despite its technological advantages. To modify the technology and increase its accuracy, the factors that influence precision need to be analysed and identified. While size, depth, localisation and invasiveness affect sensitivity, vascularisation might show an increased conductance and thus might affect specificity. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: All patients were investigated with EIS (TransScan TS 2000, Migdal Ha Emek, Israel) Planned DCE-MRI prior to histological clarification were included (295 lesions). Dynamic enhancements were assigned scores after analysis of subtracted images after application of Gd-DTPA. D1: strong enhancement of >100% from initial signal obtained on native T1weighted sequence; D2: moderate enhancement 50-100%; D3: enhancement similar to glandular tissue, <50%; D4: subtle or no enhancement, less then surrounding glandular tissue. RESULTS: 89/113 malignant and 107/182 benign findings were visible by a focal increased conductance and/or capacitance using EIS (Sensitivity 79%, Specificity 59%). DCE-MRI was aborted due to claustrophobia in 17/295 cases. MR was used and out of 278 completed MR examinations, 101/104 malignant and 141/174 benign lesions were correctly diagnosed as benign or malignant leading to a sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 81%. D1 benign lesions were positive in EIS in 33/55 cases suggesting a specificity of 44.4%. This value increases significantly with decreased vascularity to 68.9% (D2-4; 82/119). Out of 60 fibroadenomatous lesions, 10/23 fibroadenomas in class 1 had no focal increased conductance or capacitance and were thus considered as non-suspicious in EIS. The same result was applicable for the 29/37 benign lesions with a D2-4 contrast uptake (43.5% vs. 78.4%, p<.01). CONCLUSION: Vascularisation influences the measurable conductance at low frequency and therefore partially causes the insufficiently low specificity of EIS. Impedance measurements at frequencies in a range of 0.1 KHz to 1 MHz are required . According to theoretical and in vitro studies this might increase the accuracy of EIS technology. © 2007 Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal. All rights reserved.
format Text
id pubmed-3097686
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Department of Biomedical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Malaysia
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30976862011-05-24 The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz Malich, A Scholz, B Kott, A Facius, M Fischer, DR Freesmeyer, MG Biomed Imaging Interv J Original Article OBJECTIVE: Cancer cells exhibit altered local dielectric properties compared to normal cells. These properties are measurable as a difference in electrical conductance using electrical impedance scanning (EIS). EIS is at present not sufficiently accurate for clinical routine despite its technological advantages. To modify the technology and increase its accuracy, the factors that influence precision need to be analysed and identified. While size, depth, localisation and invasiveness affect sensitivity, vascularisation might show an increased conductance and thus might affect specificity. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: All patients were investigated with EIS (TransScan TS 2000, Migdal Ha Emek, Israel) Planned DCE-MRI prior to histological clarification were included (295 lesions). Dynamic enhancements were assigned scores after analysis of subtracted images after application of Gd-DTPA. D1: strong enhancement of >100% from initial signal obtained on native T1weighted sequence; D2: moderate enhancement 50-100%; D3: enhancement similar to glandular tissue, <50%; D4: subtle or no enhancement, less then surrounding glandular tissue. RESULTS: 89/113 malignant and 107/182 benign findings were visible by a focal increased conductance and/or capacitance using EIS (Sensitivity 79%, Specificity 59%). DCE-MRI was aborted due to claustrophobia in 17/295 cases. MR was used and out of 278 completed MR examinations, 101/104 malignant and 141/174 benign lesions were correctly diagnosed as benign or malignant leading to a sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 81%. D1 benign lesions were positive in EIS in 33/55 cases suggesting a specificity of 44.4%. This value increases significantly with decreased vascularity to 68.9% (D2-4; 82/119). Out of 60 fibroadenomatous lesions, 10/23 fibroadenomas in class 1 had no focal increased conductance or capacitance and were thus considered as non-suspicious in EIS. The same result was applicable for the 29/37 benign lesions with a D2-4 contrast uptake (43.5% vs. 78.4%, p<.01). CONCLUSION: Vascularisation influences the measurable conductance at low frequency and therefore partially causes the insufficiently low specificity of EIS. Impedance measurements at frequencies in a range of 0.1 KHz to 1 MHz are required . According to theoretical and in vitro studies this might increase the accuracy of EIS technology. © 2007 Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal. All rights reserved. Department of Biomedical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Malaysia 2007-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3097686/ /pubmed/21614295 http://dx.doi.org/10.2349/biij.3.4.e33 Text en © 2007 Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Malich, A
Scholz, B
Kott, A
Facius, M
Fischer, DR
Freesmeyer, MG
The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title_full The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title_fullStr The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title_full_unstemmed The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title_short The impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 Hz
title_sort impact of lesion vascularisation on tumours detection by electrical impedance scanning at 200 hz
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3097686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21614295
http://dx.doi.org/10.2349/biij.3.4.e33
work_keys_str_mv AT malicha theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT scholzb theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT kotta theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT faciusm theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT fischerdr theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT freesmeyermg theimpactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT malicha impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT scholzb impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT kotta impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT faciusm impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT fischerdr impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz
AT freesmeyermg impactoflesionvascularisationontumoursdetectionbyelectricalimpedancescanningat200hz