Title: HIGH INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND
1HIGH INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND
- CESO Conference
- April 29, 2004
- Jason Smale
- Clinical Engineering Student,
- University of Toronto
2A PRIMTIVE ANALOGY
ANALOGY FROM Gail R. ter Haar, Royal Marsden
HospitalUnited Kingdom PICTURE FROM
http//wmuma.com/tracker/skills/fire/magnifier/
3ADVANTAGES OF HIFU
- Non-Invasive
- Preserve tissue integrity
- Relatively Infection Free
- Non-Ionizing Treatment
- Minimal or no anesthesia required
- Shorter recovery period
- Shorter treatment time
- 10-15 sec/treatment point
- 60-600 sec/treatment point for other hyperthermia
treatments - laser, RF or water
4LIMITATIONS OF HIFU
- Controlling of the Focal Spot
- Patient shift or tissue motion
- Cannot adequately control shape, size or location
- Beam dosimetry
- Unknown tissue temperatures
- Possibility of acoustic cavitation
- Local tissue thermal conductivity and perfusion
- Tissue specific
- Patient specific (Skin thickness, proportion of
fat and muscle) - Growth specific (Malignant, Benign, and Healthy)
5SOLUTIONS?
- Couple With Diagnostic Ultrasound
- Can monitor focal point position
- Could not measure tissue temperature
- Couple With Diagnostic MRI
- Easily monitor soft tissue focal point
- Can calculate tissue temperature
- Proton resonant frequency is dependent of
temperature - Must use a MRI compatible focused ultrasound
system
6MR GUIDED HIFU SYSTEM
UPPER PICTURE SOURCE http//www.insightec.com LEF
T PICTURE SOURCE http//www.surgeons.org/asernip-
s/net-s/information/mri_guided_focused_ultrasound.
htm RIGHT PICTURE SOURCE MRI Guided Focused
Ultrasound Surgery of Fibroadenomas in the
Breast A Feasibility Study, Hynynen et al.
7MR GUIDED TEMP CONTROL
UPPER PICTURE SOURCE http//www.dkfz-heidelberg.d
e/mrphys/temperature/temperature.html LEFT
PICTURE SOURCE MR Imagingguided Focused
Ultrasound Surgery of Uterine Leiomyomas A
Feasibility Study, Tempany et al. RIGHT PICTURE
SOURCE MRI Guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery of
Fibroadenomas in the Breast A Feasibility Study,
Hynynen et al.
8HIFUS TREATMENT TREND
- 1960s Proved to be an effective treatment for
Parkinsons Disease - Outdone by L-Dopa treatment
- 1980s and 90s Proved to be an effective eye
treatment - Outdone by eye-laser treatment
- 1990s and 2000s Tumor ablation treatment
- Hoping to be outdone by a cure for cancer?
9HIFUS TUMOR ABLATION EFFECTIVENESS
- Proven effective treatment for prostate tumors
- Uses a trans-rectal transducer
- Investigations are being performed to test safety
and efficacy - 9 centers are performing clinical investigations
worldwide - Phase III Benign Fibroadenomas
- Paper published Hynynen (BWH)
- Phase III Benign Uterine Fibroids
- Paper published by Tempany (BWH)
- Phase II Breast Cancer
- Paper published by Gianfelice (St. Luc)
- General Investigation into Brain Tumor ablation
- Investigations underway at BWH
10IMPORTANT POINTS FROM RESEARCH
- Patients are released same day
- Some patients suffered from
- Skin burns, Abdominal Blistering, Scar Tissue
burns - Approximately 17 of patients received 2nd degree
burns - Mild discomfort as tumor site for 24-36 hours
following ablation - 30 patients rated pain more severe than mild
discomfort
11TRANS-SKULL HIFU
- Problems with using HIFU on the brain
- Heterogeneous thickness and density of the skull
- Very diverse acoustic velocities of the skull and
brain tissue - Impedance matching
- Results in Signal attenuation, overheating of
tissue near the skull and requires a high number
of transducers - Uses CT instead of MR
- Able to measure heterogeneous internal density of
skull - The magic of time reversal
- Virtual source sends acoustical wave from focal
point and amplitude and delay are calculated at
HIFU transducer points - Measured signal is sent into the brain to create
focal point
12HIFU EFFECTS ON THE CLINICAL ENGINEER
- Future roll of MR Guided HIFU is relatively
unknown - Similar to lasers The solution without a
problem - Since reporting on Phase 3 trials for benign
tumors, implementation might be just over the
horizon for some of the larger hospitals - Its better to lead the technology trend than to
follow it. A. Dolan, University of Toronto
13REFERENCES
- MR Imaging-guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery of
Uterine Leiomyomas, Tempany et al., Radiology
(226), March 2003 - MR Imaging-guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery of
Fibroadenomas in the Breast, Hynynen et al.,
Radiology (219), April 2001 - MR Imaging-guided Focused US Ablation of Breast
Cancer Histopathologic Assessment of
EffectivenessInitial Experience, Gianfelice et
al., Radiology (227), June 2003 - High Intensity Focused Ultrasound for the
Treatment of Tumors, Ter Haar, Echocardiography,
Volume 18, No. 4, May 2001 - New and Emerging Techniques Surgical Procedure
Brief MRI-Guided Focused Ultrasound for Uterine
Fibroids, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons,
August 2003 - Tissue Thermal Conductivity by Magnetic Resonance
Thermometry and Focused Ultrasound Heating, Cheng
et al., JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
(16), 2002 - Experimental demonstration of noninvasive
transskull adaptive focusing based on prior
computed tomography scans, Aubry et al., Journal
of Acoustical Society of America, January 2003 - Poster MR Guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery, R.
Newman, Vice President, InSightec TxSonics - InSightec Website www.insightec.com
- In-vivo MR Temperature Monitoring of Focused
Ultrasound (HIFU) in Rabbit Muscle, Rademaker et
al., http//www.dkfz-heidelberg.de/mrphys/temperat
ure/temperature.html - QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS jason.smale_at_utoronto.ca