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ARRA funds Research to improve Prostate
Cancer Identification
Newswise — Rutgers University and two
collaborators have received a $3.4 million
research grant to develop tools aimed at
improving the identification of prostate
cancer using MRI, or magnetic resonance
imaging.
The five-year grant, with funding in the
first two years from the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009, was
awarded by the National Institutes of Health
under an initiative to promote industry and
academic partnerships.
Rutgers is working with Penn Medicine and
Siemens on this pioneering research.
Recent studies by Rutgers and Penn
researchers show that powerful,
high-resolution MRI technology can reveal
cancerous tissue in prostate glands and
pinpoint where the tissue is concentrated.
Radiologists,
however, do not always know whether
unusual-looking visual features indicate
cancerous growth or benign variations.
“At this time, it’s often just a prediction
or an educated guess,” said Anant Madabhushi,
assistant professor of biomedical
engineering and Rutgers’ principal
investigator on the grant.
“Before MRI technology is ready for
widespread clinical use, the medical
profession will have to be confident that it
can make readings accurately and
consistently.”
Each year, there are more than 27,000 deaths
from prostate cancer in the United States
and 190,000 new cases diagnosed. Diagnosis
is based on PSA levels in blood, physical
examination and needle biopsies, because
current imaging techniques don’t distinguish
cancerous tissue.
MRI
has the potential to offer a diagnosis
non-invasively and, along with other
information, help physicians customize the
most effective and least debilitating
treatment plan.
Under the research grant, Penn researchers
will make magnetic resonance images of
prostate glands in cancer patients and
prepare tissue samples from those same
glands after they are surgically removed in
the course of treatment.
Rutgers and Siemens researchers will then
develop computerized tools that align MRI
views with digitized images of tissue
slices.
These
tools will allow investigators to better
identify MRI features that reveal cancerous
tissue and develop pattern recognition
software that will help radiologists make
accurate and timely diagnoses.
“This is an immense and complicated task,”
said Madabhushi, who is also a member of The
Cancer Institute of New Jersey.
“Our tools will have to account for
variations in MRI and tissue image sizes,
tissue that was imaged but lost in the
process of sectioning, or MRI images shaped
differently from tissue sample images due to
gland deformation.”
Siemens will refine research tools into
software packages for scientists to use as
they conduct additional studies and develop
diagnostic tools and techniques.
While the current research grant focuses on
the prostate gland, Madabhushi believes the
same tools can be adapted to imaging for
breast cancer and other forms of cancers.
ARRA funding is supporting three new
postdoctoral research jobs at Rutgers, and
one position at Penn to do image collection
and management. Research data will become
publicly available for further
investigations.
Researchers at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine include
principal investigator Michael Feldman,
associate professor of Pathology and
Laboratory Medicine and medical director of
Pathology Informatics; and co-principal
investigators John E Tomaszewski, professor
of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and
Mark Rosen, assistant professor of
Radiology.
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