Thyroid cancer affects 6,000 Canadians each year. Nodules on the thyroid are detected using ultrasound imaging and surgery is the most common treatment. However, most nodules are benign, and therefore a biopsy is needed to decide whether surgery is necessary. Ultrasound imaging is very sensitive for localizing nodules, but does not differentiate between cancerous and benign ones. To address this limitation of US imaging, investigators have designed and constructed, in collaboration with Sogang University, Seoul, S. Korea, a novel imaging system that performs complimentary imaging modalities (ultrasound (US), photoacoustic (PA)) that could potentially help diagnose nodules without the need for biopsy and unnecessary surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
9
This trimodal imaging system was developed in collaboration with Sogang University and is composed of three subsystems: ultrasound, photoacoustic and fluorescence. For this study, the fluorescence subsystem will not be used. The photoacoustic and ultrasound subsystems and data acquisition are controlled by a single workstation. The complete system is Canadian Standards Association (CSA) certified.
Princess Margaret Cancer Centre
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Detect/localize thyroid nodules and lymph nodes in vivo by using tri-modal imaging
Time frame: up to 5 months
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