Novocure Ltd., Topaz Building, 4th Floor, MATAM Center, PO Box 15022, Haifa, Israel.
Phys Med Biol. 2019 Sep 19;64(18):185014. doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/ab33c6.
The study of the dielectric properties of tissues plays a key role in understanding the interaction between electromagnetic energy and the human body, for safety assessments of human exposure to electromagnetic fields, as well as for numerous biomedical applications such as tumor treating fields (TTFields). TTFields are low-intensity alternating electric fields in the 100-500 kHz frequency range, which have an antimitotic effect on cancerous cells. TTFields are delivered to the body through pairs of transducer arrays placed on a patient's skin in close proximity to the tumor. Therefore, it is essential to understand how the skin's dielectric properties affect TTFields delivery in clinical settings. In this paper, we present a study combining in vivo measurements with numerical simulations that elucidate how different layers of the skin influence TTFields distribution in the body. The dielectric properties of the skin were measured on volunteers using a setup that ensured skin conditions resembled those when TTFields are delivered to patients. The measured properties were incorporated into a realistic human computational phantom and delivery of TTFields to the phantom's abdomen was simulated. The total impedance of the simulated model was within the mid-range of impedance values measured in patients with pancreatic cancer treated with TTFields. A computational study investigating model sensitivity to the dielectric properties of the skin and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) showed that when skin conductivity increased above a threshold value, the total impedance of the model was largely insensitive to changes in the conductivity of these tissues. Furthermore, for a given current, the field intensity within the internal organs was mostly unaffected by skin properties but was highly sensitive to the conductivity of the organ itself. This study provides a new insight into the role of skin in determining the distribution of TTFields within the body.
组织介电特性的研究在理解电磁能与人体相互作用方面起着关键作用,这对于评估人体暴露于电磁场的安全性以及众多生物医学应用(如肿瘤治疗电场(TTFields))都非常重要。TTFields 是频率在 100-500 kHz 范围内的低强度交变电场,对癌细胞具有抗有丝分裂作用。TTFields 通过放置在靠近肿瘤的患者皮肤表面的一对换能器阵列传输到体内。因此,了解皮肤介电特性如何影响临床环境中的 TTFields 传输至关重要。在本文中,我们进行了一项结合体内测量和数值模拟的研究,阐明了皮肤的不同层如何影响体内 TTFields 的分布。使用一种确保皮肤条件类似于 TTFields 传输到患者时的条件的设置,对志愿者的皮肤介电特性进行了测量。将测量到的特性纳入到一个现实的人体计算模型中,并对 TTFields 传输到模型腹部进行了模拟。模拟模型的总阻抗处于接受 TTFields 治疗的胰腺癌患者测量的阻抗值的中间范围内。一项针对模型对皮肤和皮下脂肪组织(SAT)介电特性敏感性的计算研究表明,当皮肤电导率超过阈值时,模型的总阻抗对这些组织电导率的变化基本不敏感。此外,对于给定的电流,内部器官内的场强基本不受皮肤特性的影响,但对器官本身的电导率高度敏感。这项研究为皮肤在确定 TTFields 在体内分布中的作用提供了新的见解。