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MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer

BACKGROUND: The most common tool to test malignancy in the study of thyroid nodules (NT) is ultrasound and fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). However, the sensitivity and specificity of the method and the effectiveness in thyroid cancer are limited; therefore new methods to study thyroid nodules...

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Autores principales: Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda, Presti, Giuseppe Lo, Cortese, Lorenzo, Contini, Davide, Mora, Alberto Dalla, Halperin, Irene, Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra, Pifferi, Antonio, Squarcia, Mattia, Tosi, Alberto, Durduran, Turgut, Porta, Mireia Mora
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207931/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1254
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author Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda
Presti, Giuseppe Lo
Cortese, Lorenzo
Contini, Davide
Mora, Alberto Dalla
Halperin, Irene
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Pifferi, Antonio
Squarcia, Mattia
Tosi, Alberto
Durduran, Turgut
Porta, Mireia Mora
author_facet Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda
Presti, Giuseppe Lo
Cortese, Lorenzo
Contini, Davide
Mora, Alberto Dalla
Halperin, Irene
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Pifferi, Antonio
Squarcia, Mattia
Tosi, Alberto
Durduran, Turgut
Porta, Mireia Mora
author_sort Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The most common tool to test malignancy in the study of thyroid nodules (NT) is ultrasound and fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). However, the sensitivity and specificity of the method and the effectiveness in thyroid cancer are limited; therefore new methods to study thyroid nodules are required. In this way our goal is to introduce hybrid diffuse optical instruments that are capable to measure and discriminate altered microvascular blood flow, blood volume and tissue scattering coefficients of TN. Near-infrared diffuse optical technologies aim to overcome the shortcomings of present techniques while screening for malignant thyroid nodules for early and fast diagnosis of cancer. This idea was based on the previous experience in breast cancers with diffuse optical techniques. METHODS: We have developed a device based on near-infrared diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), which is a technology aimed at retrieving the microvascular flow of a certain region of tissue by mean of low power near-infrared laser light, and used in combination with a commercial ultrasound system (US). In order to combine these devices, we have developed a probe enabling multimodal data acquisition and subsequently we have analyzed the optical properties and the blood flow index in the thyroid lobes of eleven subjects who presented a thyroid nodule. RESULTS: Four subjects have required FNAB: P4 and P7 were reported as being malignant (Bethesda VI and IV respectively) while P6 and P8 were evaluated as being benign (Bethesda II). Surgical removal confirmed papillary thyroid carcinoma in P4, while denied the result of FNAB for P7 (Multinodular thyroid hyperplasia). We have considered the contralateral lobe as intra-subject reference to validate the feasibility of the DCS system in a very absorbing tissue as thyroid is. The difference between the blood flow index of the nodule and the contralateral lobe is maximum for subject P4, while the difference in benign subjects is lower. T-test showed no significant difference between benign nodules and contralateral lobes. Subject P7 showed a small difference as for other benign subjects despite the FNAB results indicating presence of malignancy. CONCLUSION: Apparently diffuse optics technologies would be able to differentiate malignant thyroid nodules from benign thyroid nodules, but more measurements require confirming our preliminary results as that diffuse optical technology can complement the current techniques such as US and FNAB. A new measurement campaign is being scheduled with a completed, fully integrated device that was developed within the LUCA project (http://www.luca-project.eu).
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spelling pubmed-72079312020-05-13 MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda Presti, Giuseppe Lo Cortese, Lorenzo Contini, Davide Mora, Alberto Dalla Halperin, Irene Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra Pifferi, Antonio Squarcia, Mattia Tosi, Alberto Durduran, Turgut Porta, Mireia Mora J Endocr Soc Thyroid BACKGROUND: The most common tool to test malignancy in the study of thyroid nodules (NT) is ultrasound and fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). However, the sensitivity and specificity of the method and the effectiveness in thyroid cancer are limited; therefore new methods to study thyroid nodules are required. In this way our goal is to introduce hybrid diffuse optical instruments that are capable to measure and discriminate altered microvascular blood flow, blood volume and tissue scattering coefficients of TN. Near-infrared diffuse optical technologies aim to overcome the shortcomings of present techniques while screening for malignant thyroid nodules for early and fast diagnosis of cancer. This idea was based on the previous experience in breast cancers with diffuse optical techniques. METHODS: We have developed a device based on near-infrared diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), which is a technology aimed at retrieving the microvascular flow of a certain region of tissue by mean of low power near-infrared laser light, and used in combination with a commercial ultrasound system (US). In order to combine these devices, we have developed a probe enabling multimodal data acquisition and subsequently we have analyzed the optical properties and the blood flow index in the thyroid lobes of eleven subjects who presented a thyroid nodule. RESULTS: Four subjects have required FNAB: P4 and P7 were reported as being malignant (Bethesda VI and IV respectively) while P6 and P8 were evaluated as being benign (Bethesda II). Surgical removal confirmed papillary thyroid carcinoma in P4, while denied the result of FNAB for P7 (Multinodular thyroid hyperplasia). We have considered the contralateral lobe as intra-subject reference to validate the feasibility of the DCS system in a very absorbing tissue as thyroid is. The difference between the blood flow index of the nodule and the contralateral lobe is maximum for subject P4, while the difference in benign subjects is lower. T-test showed no significant difference between benign nodules and contralateral lobes. Subject P7 showed a small difference as for other benign subjects despite the FNAB results indicating presence of malignancy. CONCLUSION: Apparently diffuse optics technologies would be able to differentiate malignant thyroid nodules from benign thyroid nodules, but more measurements require confirming our preliminary results as that diffuse optical technology can complement the current techniques such as US and FNAB. A new measurement campaign is being scheduled with a completed, fully integrated device that was developed within the LUCA project (http://www.luca-project.eu). Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207931/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1254 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Thyroid
Velazquez, Gloria Beatriz Aranda
Presti, Giuseppe Lo
Cortese, Lorenzo
Contini, Davide
Mora, Alberto Dalla
Halperin, Irene
Hanzu, Felicia Alexandra
Pifferi, Antonio
Squarcia, Mattia
Tosi, Alberto
Durduran, Turgut
Porta, Mireia Mora
MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title_full MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title_fullStr MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title_full_unstemmed MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title_short MON-488 Technologies of Diffuse Optics in the Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
title_sort mon-488 technologies of diffuse optics in the diagnosis of thyroid cancer
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207931/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1254
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