new cancer detection scan
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Anti-landmine technology

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The new system has none of the drawbacks of mammogram scans
London - Arabstoday

The new system has none of the drawbacks of mammogram scans London - Arabstoday British scientists have created a revolutionary breast-screening system using anti-landmine technology that can detect cancer in seconds. The pain-free radio-wave scanner is safer than traditional mammogram  X-rays, which carry a radiation risk and are used on hundreds of thousands of women every year. Experts believe the new device, which is also cheaper, can be used on women of any age, unlike current technology. It is expected the system, called Maria, will be in widespread use within five years in GPs’ surgeries and clinics. Women under 50 are not routinely screened for breast cancer partly because of the risks from regular doses of ionising radiation from an early age. They also have denser breast tissue, which makes it harder to detect tumours using X-rays. Using radio waves makes it easier to find problems in all tissue. But the most appealing aspect for women is pain-free examinations, with an end to having the breast squeezed between two X-ray plates. Instead, the breast is held in a ceramic cup-shaped scanner while data are transferred to a computer within eight seconds to produce a 3D image. Conventional screening uses low-dose X-rays and two scans are taken of the breast, during which the technician has to shelter from the radiation. It takes an average of one minute for a radiologist to examine a case, but this can be more than doubled if another opinion is sought or  the X-ray is difficult to interpret. Women are usually informed of  the result within two weeks. Developed by Micrima, a company that began at Bristol University, the Maria technology is based on a landmine-detection project that was able to locate non-metallic explosives in soil. In the same way, the Maria system can find dangerous ‘hot spots’ in breasts using scanning signals from radio waves. They register differences between normal breast tissue and a collection of blood and water contained in a tumour. In pilot studies on 200 women, the system picked up about 80 per cent of tumours – a success rate close toexisting techniques. The latest phase of tests on Maria (Multistatic Array Processing for Radiowave Image Acquisition) took place at Frenchay Hospital’s Breast Care Centre in Bristol, and the city’s Southmead Hospital. Dr Mike Shere, breast specialist at Southmead Hospital, said: ‘We are very excited about the potential of this completely new method of breast imaging. ‘It has none of the disadvantages of the current methods – ultrasound, mammography and MRI. It is quick, safe, comfortable and cheap, and is already producing good images with high sensitivity.  This technology uses radio waves which are almost exactly the same as mobile phone frequency – and less energy. It is completely safe, unlike mammography, where there is an increasing cancer risk when women have more X-rays. ‘And it’s much more comfortable for women, some of whom may be deterred from screening at present because they find it painful.’ The women in the pilot study, who had already been diagnosed with breast cancer through X-rays, ultrasound or detection of a lump, were double-checked using the new system. In four out of five cases, the tumour was identified and clinicians expect the rate to increase to 90 per cent. The technique uses an innovative radar system developed by a team at Bristol University, led by Professor Ian Craddock and Professor Alan Preece. Dr Shere said: ‘We need to fine-tune the software, but this is  a good result from a large number of women.’ He hopes Maria screening will be in widespread use within five years. Because it does not require the radiation ‘shield’ facilities necessary for bulky X-ray machines, it can be used anywhere. ‘We’re developing computer-aided diagnosis so it will be more foolproof than current expertise using the naked eye,’ said Dr Shere. ‘Mammography is really reaching the limits of what it can achieve. Although MRI scanning is the most sensitive tool, it’s hideously expensive and takes a long time. ‘We need this new technology to make a leap forward.’ The team behind Micrima is now raising funds to develop the equipment and computer software. Roy Johnson, executive chairman of the company, said he expected the equipment to cost less than £10,000, compared with X-ray machines and specialist facilities that can cost up to £400,000 . Sarah Sellars, assistant director of the NHS Breast Screening Programme, said mammography was currently the ‘gold standard’ method of detecting early breast cancer, ‘based on robust clinical evidence’, but ‘we will watch  the progress of this technology with interest’.  

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