Researchers at the University of Chicago are developing
computer-aided diagnosis (CADx) and quantitative image analysis (QIA)
methods for mammograms, ultrasounds and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) to identify specific tumor
characteristics, including size, shape and sharpness, said lead
researcher Maryellen Giger, A.N. Pritzker Professor of Radiology/Medical
Physics and director of the Imaging Research Institute at the
University of Chicago.
Currently, computer-aided detection provides a "second opinion" to a
radiologist in locating suspicious regions within mammograms. Next,
radiologists will ultimately be able to use computer-extracted lesion
characteristics when performing a diagnosis to assess whether the tumor
is cancerous.
The role of quantitative image analysis is expanding beyond screening
and toward application of risk assessment, diagnosis, prognosis, and
response to therapy, and in using data to identify how tumor
characteristics apply to disease states, Giger said.
This could lead to the comparison of a tumor's characteristics with
thousands of similar cases, enabling the exploration of complex
relationships among tumor characteristics across large populations,
which may ultimately contribute to the design of patient-specific
treatments. It could also be used to study the association between a
tumor's observable characteristics and cell-level data for the emerging
field of imaging and genomics, which aims to identify genes that
influence the risk for disease.
While results are promising for digital mammograms, researchers are
extending their analysis to breast ultrasounds and MRIs due to the need
for clinical validation within a larger screening population.
Through studies between image-based characteristics and genomics,
investigators will potentially be able to determine which tumor
characteristics are related to and which complement genetic findings,
with the ultimate goal of merging them to include both genetic and
environmental contributions in clinical decisions. Researchers are now
using data-mining methods to identify those potential relationships.
A paper titled "Quantitative breast image analysis for personalized
medicine" describing the work by Giger was published recently in the SPIE Newsroom.
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