Johns Hopkins Medicine
Office of Communications and Public Affairs
Media Contact: Gary Stephenson
410-955-5384
E-mail: gstephenson@jhmi.edu
December 12, 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
COMBINING VARIOUS MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING TECHNIQUES MAY HELP IMPROVE
BREAST CANCER DETECTION
Researchers at Johns Hopkins say that combining various types of magnetic
resonance (MR) imaging techniques more accurately sorts cancers from benign
masses in breast tissues than any single imaging techniques. Their findings
are presented in the October issue of Radiology.
Magnetic resonance imaging scanners can be calibrated to take images that
highlight a specific type of human tissue. For example, so-called
T1-weighted imaging sequences are best at imaging fatty tissues, while
T2-weighted sequences best show fluids, like those found inside
cysts. Additionally, 3-dimensional MR imaging can help define the size and
shape of tumors. Contrast agents, dyes injected into patients prior to
imaging to concentrate in the tumor and make it more visible, further
enhance MR images similar to the way dye in water helps highlight the
"veins" in celery stalks.
In their study, Hopkins researchers combined T1, T2 and 3-D imaging
techniques, with and without contrast agents, on 36 subjects. Eighteen
already had been diagnosed with benign breast lesions, and 18 with breast
cancer. The researchers reviewed the results of the combined images
without knowing which images came from which patient.
vThe combined, or multiparametric MRI technique, was able to identify and
characterize breast lesion tissue clusters in all 36 patients, revealing
which were benign and which were malignant. In addition, the
multiparametric technique was even more powerful when used with contrast
agents, providing more precise differentiation between the cancerous and
non-cancerous tissue than the same images without contrast.
"Each individual imaging modality has its advantages," says Michael Jacobs,
Ph.D., the lead researcher for the study at the Hopkins Department of
Radiology. "When all these techniques are combined into one data set, you
can achieve an approach that shows the characteristics of a lesion not
normally available using just one imaging technique."
Jacobs notes that while his study appears to demonstrate the feasibility of
using a combined imaging approach to identifying breast tumors, larger
studies are needed to determine if the approach might be useful for
studying the molecular dynamics of breast cancer tumors.
"It's known that certain compounds, such as choline and sodium ions, tend
to concentrate in cancer cells," Jacobs says. "We are now investigating
whether multiparametric MR imaging might be effective in imaging
intracellular compounds within breast tumors. If so, this will enable a
comprehensive assessment of the tumor environment."
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