New MRI Technique May Identify Cervical Cancer Early
By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 10 Nov 2008
Using high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with a customized vaginal coil, researchers may be able to identify cervical cancer in its earliest stages, according to a new study.Posted on 10 Nov 2008
The new technique provides superior imaging of smaller tumors and may improve surgical options when fertility-sparing procedures are being considered. The study's findings were published in the November 2008 issue of the journal Radiology.
"Small lesions are often difficult to image, but imaging their full extent is important in surgical planning,” said study author Nandita deSouza, F.R.C.R., professor and codirector of the Cancer Research UK Clinical Magnetic Resonance Research Group at the Institute of Cancer Research (London, UK). "By adding this technique to image the diffusion or movement of water within tissue, we can improve the accuracy of detecting small tumors.”
The American Cancer Society estimates that 11,070 women in the United States alone will be diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer in 2008. Mostly attributable to increased use of the Pap test, cervical cancer death rates declined 74% between 1955 and 1992 and continue to decline by nearly 4% annually. "Cervical cancers increasingly are being picked up at an earlier stage,” Dr. deSouza said. "This procedure causes no more discomfort than a Pap test and the diffusion-weighted imaging itself only takes 84 seconds.” The entire procedure takes about 15 minutes.
In the 22-month study period, 59 women, ages 24 to 83, were accepted for inclusion into the study and placed into two groups. Group 1 consisted of 20 women awaiting biopsies due to abnormal cervical tissue development at screening and 18 women who had invasive cervical cancer confirmed by biopsy. Group 2 consisted of 21 women in whom it was necessary to evaluate the presence of the invasive disease.
The patients underwent high-resolution MRI with the addition of a ring coil inserted into the vagina and positioned around the cervix. The coil was designed specifically to image the cervix and enabled measurement of diffusion of water within the tissue cells. The researchers found that the diffusion of water was reduced in cancerous tissue compared to normal tissue.
"Measurement of water diffusion enabled us to differentiate cervical cancers from the normal glandular lining of the cervix,” Dr. deSouza said. "Use of these measurements in conjunction with conventional MRI makes detection of early stage cervical cancer easier. I am hopeful that this technique will be routinely used in the future, in patients with suspected small tumors.”
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Institute of Cancer Research