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This is a pilot study. The main purposes for doing the study are to see if there is a relationship between lumpectomy volume and position as measured by USEI and by CT. This is not a study to see if the use of USEI is better than the current method of using CT for daily radiation therapy positioning.
Full description
Unfortunately, contemporary US imaging is not sufficiently sensitive to delineate the lumpectomy bed for PBI. We propose to supplant B-mode imaging with a novel US elasticity imaging (USEI) method to delineate the subtle and complex boundaries of the lumpectomy cavity. Our preliminary studies suggest that USEI may be superior to B-mode imaging (see statistical section and Ref. 6-7). However our work was only done in ex-vivo tissue models. In the literature, there are many studies showing the superior sensitivity and specificity of strain imaging compared to regular B-mode imaging7.
The benefit of developing a way to use ultrasound for target localization is clear. Identification of the target would no longer be dependent on unreliable external landmarks but now on direct internal information. As a consequence, targeting errors, most commonly associated with patient positioning, could be significantly reduced or practically eliminated. Thus, we propose to study the ability of USEI to detect and characterize the lumpectomy bed in-vivo using CT data as ground truth. We will pursue our work in two specific aims:
Aim 1: Describe the concordance between the lumpectomy bed's center-of-mass (COM) as determined by USEI and CT.
Aim 2: Describe the concordance between the lumpectomy bed volume as measured by USEI and CT.
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Inclusion Criteria:
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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