School of Medicine, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway 8, Ireland.
Endowave Ltd., Dublin 2, Ireland.
Sensors (Basel). 2020 Apr 23;20(8):2400. doi: 10.3390/s20082400.
The aim of this work was to develop multimodal anthropomorphic breast phantoms suitable for evaluating the imaging performance of a recently-introduced Microwave Imaging (MWI) technique in comparison to the established diagnostic imaging modalities of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Ultrasound (US), mammography and Computed Tomography (CT). MWI is an emerging technique with significant potential to supplement established imaging techniques to improve diagnostic confidence for breast cancer detection. To date, numerical simulations have been used to assess the different MWI scanning and image reconstruction algorithms in current use, while only a few clinical trials have been conducted. To bridge the gap between the numerical simulation environment and a more realistic diagnostic scenario, anthropomorphic phantoms which mimic breast tissues in terms of their heterogeneity, anatomy, morphology, and mechanical and dielectric characteristics, may be used. Key in this regard is achieving realism in the imaging appearance of the different healthy and pathologic tissue types for each of the modalities, taking into consideration the differing imaging and contrast mechanisms for each modality. Suitable phantoms can thus be used by radiologists to correlate image findings between the emerging MWI technique and the more familiar images generated by the conventional modalities. Two phantoms were developed in this study, representing difficult-to-image and easy-to-image patients: the former contained a complex boundary between the mammary fat and fibroglandular tissues, extracted from real patient MRI datasets, while the latter contained a simpler and less morphologically accurate interface. Both phantoms were otherwise identical, with tissue-mimicking materials (TMMs) developed to mimic skin, subcutaneous fat, fibroglandular tissue, tumor and pectoral muscle. The phantoms' construction used non-toxic materials, and they were inexpensive and relatively easy to manufacture. Both phantoms were scanned using conventional modalities (MRI, US, mammography and CT) and a recently introduced MWI radar detection procedure called in-coherent Multiple Signal Classification (I-MUSIC). Clinically realistic artifact-free images of the anthropomorphic breast phantoms were obtained using the conventional imaging techniques as well as the emerging technique of MWI.
本工作旨在开发适用于评估最近引入的微波成像 (MWI) 技术的成像性能的多模态拟人化乳房体模,与磁共振成像 (MRI)、超声 (US)、乳房 X 线摄影和计算机断层扫描 (CT) 等既定诊断成像方式进行比较。MWI 是一种具有显著潜力的新兴技术,可以补充既定的成像技术,以提高乳腺癌检测的诊断信心。迄今为止,已经使用数值模拟来评估当前使用的不同 MWI 扫描和图像重建算法,而仅进行了少数临床试验。为了弥合数值模拟环境与更现实的诊断情况之间的差距,可以使用拟人化体模,这些体模在异质性、解剖结构、形态和机械和介电特性方面模拟乳房组织。这方面的关键是实现每种模式下不同健康和病理组织类型的成像外观的逼真度,同时考虑到每种模式的不同成像和对比机制。因此,放射科医生可以使用合适的体模来比较新兴的 MWI 技术和更熟悉的常规模式生成的图像之间的图像发现。本研究开发了两种体模,代表成像困难和成像容易的患者:前者包含从真实患者 MRI 数据集提取的乳腺脂肪和纤维腺体组织之间的复杂边界,而后者包含更简单和形态学上不太准确的界面。两种体模在其他方面都是相同的,使用组织模拟材料 (TMM) 模拟皮肤、皮下脂肪、纤维腺体组织、肿瘤和胸肌。体模的构建使用了无毒材料,它们便宜且相对易于制造。两种体模均使用常规方式(MRI、US、乳房 X 线摄影和 CT)和最近引入的称为非相干多信号分类 (I-MUSIC) 的 MWI 雷达检测程序进行扫描。使用常规成像技术以及新兴的 MWI 技术获得了拟人化乳房体模的临床逼真、无伪影图像。