| Literature DB >> 24967878 |
Regine Choe1, Mary E Putt2, Peter M Carlile1, Turgut Durduran3, Joseph M Giammarco4, David R Busch5, Ki Won Jung1, Brian J Czerniecki6, Julia Tchou6, Michael D Feldman7, Carolyn Mies7, Mark A Rosen8, Mitchell D Schnall8, Angela DeMichele9, Arjun G Yodh10.
Abstract
Microvascular blood flow contrast is an important hemodynamic and metabolic parameter with potential to enhance in vivo breast cancer detection and therapy monitoring. Here we report on non-invasive line-scan measurements of malignant breast tumors with a hand-held optical probe in the remission geometry. The probe employs diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), a near-infrared optical method that quantifies deep tissue microvascular blood flow. Tumor-to-normal perfusion ratios are derived from thirty-two human subjects. Mean (95% confidence interval) tumor-to-normal ratio using surrounding normal tissue was 2.25 (1.92-2.63); tumor-to-normal ratio using normal tissues at the corresponding tumor location in the contralateral breast was 2.27 (1.94-2.66), and using normal tissue in the contralateral breast was 2.27 (1.90-2.70). Thus, the mean tumor-to-normal ratios were significantly different from unity irrespective of the normal tissue chosen, implying that tumors have significantly higher blood flow than normal tissues. Therefore, the study demonstrates existence of breast cancer contrast in blood flow measured by DCS. The new, optically accessible cancer contrast holds potential for cancer detection and therapy monitoring applications, and it is likely to be especially useful when combined with diffuse optical spectroscopy/tomography.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24967878 PMCID: PMC4072684 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Instrument and probe placement.
(a) Diagram of diffuse correlation spectroscopy and probe placement on a breast in sagittal view. Near-infrared light from a 786 nm long coherence laser is delivered to the breast surface via a multi-mode optical fiber (source fiber) attached to a hand-held probe. A single-mode optical fiber (detector fiber) attached to the hand-held probe collects and relays the light signal to a photon-counting avalanche photodiode (APD). An autocorrelator board calculates normalized temporal intensity autocorrelation functions of the detected light and passes the functions onto the computer for further postprocessing. (b) Schematic of probe configuration and its placement on a breast in coronal view. A source-detector separation of 2.5 cm was used in this study.
Figure 2Selection of regions to quantify regional blood flow.
Line-scans of is shown (a) for ipsilateral cancerous breast and (b) for contralateral breast respectively. First, tumor () and normal () regions are chosen in the ipsilateral breast. Then the mirror positions of tumor () and normal () regions are identified in the contralateral breast.
Definition of relative blood flows based on local regions.
| Parameter | Definition | Comments |
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| tumor vs. normal in ipsilateral breast |
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| tumor vs. its mirror position |
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| tumor vs. mirror position of normal |
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| mirror position tumor vs. normal in contralateral breast |
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| normal vs. its mirror position |
Clinical characteristics of subjects.
| Parameters | subset 1 | subset 2 | whole set |
| Number of subjects | 9 | 23 | 32 |
| Age (yr) | 51±8 | 50±11 | 50±10 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 29.1±8.2 | 27.3±5.8 | 27.8±6.5 |
| Menopausal status | |||
| Premenopausal | 3 (33%) | 14 (61%) | 17 (53%) |
| Postmenopausal | 5 (56%) | 7 (30%) | 12 (38%) |
| Perimenopausal | 1 (11%) | 1 (4%) | 2 (6%) |
| Unknown | 0 (0%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (3%) |
| Race | |||
| Caucasian | 9 (100%) | 19 (83%) | 28 (88%) |
| African American | 0 (0%) | 4 (17%) | 4 (12%) |
| Mammographic density | |||
| Almost entirely fat | 0 (0%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (3%) |
| Scattered fibroglandular densities | 3 (33%) | 7 (30%) | 10 (31%) |
| Heterogeneously dense | 4 (44%) | 12 (52%) | 16 (50%) |
| Extremely dense | 0 (0%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (3%) |
| Unknown | 2 (22%) | 2 (9%) | 4 (13%) |
| Lesion Type (primary component) | |||
| Invasive ductal carcinoma | 8 (89%) | 20 (87%) | 28 (88%) |
| Invasive lobular carcinoma | 0 (0%) | 2 (9%) | 2 (6%) |
| Ductal carcinoma | 1 (11%) | 1 (4%) | 2 (6%) |
| Maximum Lesion dimension (cm) | 3.0±1.2 | 5.5±3.4 | 4.8±3.2 |
| Estrogen Receptor (ER) | |||
| ER+ | 4 (44%) | 15 (65%) | 19 (59%) |
| ER− | 5 (56%) | 8 (35%) | 13 (41%) |
| Progesterone Receptor (PR) | |||
| PR+ | 5 (56%) | 12 (52%) | 17 (53%) |
| PR− | 4 (44%) | 11 (48%) | 15 (47%) |
| Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) | |||
| HER2/neu+ | 3 (33%) | 5 (22%) | 8 (25%) |
| HER2/neu− | 6 (67%) | 18 (78%) | 24 (75%) |
| Optical measurement with respect to core biopsy | |||
| Before any core biopsy | 2 (22%) | 4 (17%) | 6 (19%) |
| <14 days after core biopsy | 0 (0%) | 5 (22%) | 5 (16%) |
| ≥14 days after core biopsy | 7 (78%) | 14 (61%) | 21 (65%) |
For continuous data such as age and body mass index (BMI), mean standard deviations are shown. For each categorical variable, the number of women is given and the percentage of the total number of women in the group appears in parentheses.
Figure 3Blood flow contrast.
(a) Boxplot of average blood flow () per region: refers to the tumor region () and refers to the normal region () in the ipsilateral breast. refers to the mirror tumor region () and refers to the mirror normal region () in the contralateral breast. (b) Boxplot of relative blood flow (): refers to the blood flow ratio between the tumor region and the normal region in the ipsilateral breast (), refers to that between the tumor region and the mirror tumor region (), and refers to that between the tumor region and the mirror normal region (). refers to the blood flow ratio between the normal region in the ipsilateral breast and the mirror normal region in the contralateral breast (), and refers to that between the mirror tumor region and the mirror normal region in the contralateral breast (). Each circle corresponds to an individual data point.
Figure 4Difference between relative blood flow from ipsilateral and contralateral breast.
from the ipsilateral breast versus from the contralateral breast. Optical measurements were performed before any core biopsy (blue solid circle), at less than 14 days (red solid triangle) or at more than 14 days after core biopsy (black asterisk).
Relative blood flow parameters based on different regions.
| Parameter | mean (95% CI) |
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| 2.25 (1.92–2.63) | <0.0001 | 32 |
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| 2.27 (1.94–2.66) | <0.0001 | 32 |
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| 2.27 (1.90–2.70) | <0.0001 | 23 |
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| 1.00 (0.84–1.19) | 0.97 | 23 |
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| 1.01 (0.85–1.20) | 0.92 | 23 |
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| 2.25 (1.78–2.85) | <0.0001 | 23 |
Mean (95% confidence interval) of relative blood flow based on different regions and values testing the hypothesis that . (See Table 1 for definitions of each parameter.) is the number of subjects used for calculating corresponding value.
Proportion of individuals with relative blood flow parameters higher than 1.
| Parameter | Percentage (95% CI) |
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| 100 (89–100) | 32 |
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| 94 (79–99) | 32 |
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| 96 (78–100) | 23 |
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| 39 (20–61) | 23 |
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| 57 (34–77) | 23 |
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| 100 (85–100) | 23 |
Percentage (%) and its 95% confidence interval are listed for each relative blood flow parameter. (See Table 1 for definitions of each parameter.) is the number of subjects used for calculating corresponding value.
Figure 5Effect of DOS-derived optical properties on .
refers to the blood flow ratio between the tumor region and the normal region in the ipsilateral breast (). refers to that between the mirror tumor region and the mirror normal region in the contralateral breast (). and were computed using assumed fixed optical properties to quantify values for . This analysis method was utilized throughout the study. and were computed using DOS-derived optical properties in quantifying values.