Login / Signup

High-Frequency (30 MHz-6 GHz) Breast Tissue Characterization Stabilized by Suction Force for Intraoperative Tumor Margin Assessment.

Hadi Mokhtari DowlatabadAmir MamdouhNarges YousefpourReihane MahdaviAshkan ZandiParisa HoseinpourSeyed Mohammad Sadegh Moosavi-KiasariFereshte AbbasvandiYasin KordehlachinMohammad ParnianiKarim Mohammadpour-AghdamMohammad FaranoushMohammad Reza Foroughi-GilvaeeMohammad Abdolahad
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
A gigahertz (GHz) range antenna formed by a coaxial probe has been applied for sensing cancerous breast lesions in the scanning platform with the assistance of a suction tube. The sensor structure was a planar central layer and a metallic sheath of size of 3 cm 2 connected to a network analyzer (keySight FieldFox N9918A) with operational bandwidth up to 26.5 GHz. Cancer tumor cells have significantly higher water content (as a dipolar molecule) than normal breast cells, changing their polarization responses and dielectric losses to incoming GHz-based stimulation. Principal component analysis named S 11 , related to the dispersion ratio of the input signal, is used as a parameter to identify malignant tumor cells in a mouse model (in vivo) and tumor specimens of breast cancer patients (in vitro) (both central and marginal parts). The results showed that S 11 values in the frequency range from 5 to 6 GHz were significantly higher in cancer-involved breast lesions. Histopathological analysis was the gold standard for achieving the S 11 calibration to distinguish normal from cancerous lesions. Our calibration on tumor specimens presented 82% positive predictive value (PPV), 100% negative predictive value (NPV), and 86% accuracy. Our goal is to apply this system as an in vivo non-invasive tumor margin scanner after further investigations in the future.
Keyphrases
  • high frequency
  • mouse model
  • transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • induced apoptosis
  • squamous cell
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • single molecule
  • signaling pathway
  • low cost
  • young adults
  • dual energy