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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38083704

RESUMO

Radical prostatectomy (RP) is a common surgical therapy to treat prostate cancer. The procedure has a high positive surgical margin (PSM) rate ranging from 4-48%. Patients with PSMs have a higher rate of cancer recurrence and often undergo noxious adjuvant therapy. Intraoperative surgical margin assessment (SMA) with an electrical impedance-based probe can potentially identify PSMs in real-time. This would enable surgeons to make data-based decisions in the operating room to improve patient outcomes. This paper focuses on characterizing an impedance sensing SMA probe with specialized electrodes to improve speed and bandwidth while maintaining accuracy. 3D electrical impedance tomography (EIT) reconstructions were generated from ex vivo bovine tissue to characterize probe imaging and to determine an optimal applied pressure range (15 Pa to 38 Pa). Classification accuracy of adipose and muscle tissue was evaluated by comparing the experimental data set to simulated data based on a ground truth binary map of the tissue. Experimental AUCs ≥0.83 were maintained up to 50 kHz. The developed impedance sensing probe successfully classified between muscle and adipose tissue in an ex vivo bovine model. Future work includes improving performance of the SMA probe with custom hardware and collecting data from ex vivo and in vivo prostatic tissues.Clinical Relevance-This technology is expected to reduce the rate of PSMs in RP and decrease the use of post-surgical adjuvant therapies. It is also anticipated that intraoperative impedance measurements will increase efficacy of nerve sparing procedures and reduce complications such as incontinence and erectile dysfunction.


Assuntos
Margens de Excisão , Neoplasias da Próstata , Masculino , Humanos , Animais , Bovinos , Impedância Elétrica , Recidiva Local de Neoplasia , Próstata/cirurgia , Neoplasias da Próstata/cirurgia
2.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 34(7): 1590-1601, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25730825

RESUMO

Radially configured microendoscopic electrical impedance probes intended for intraoperative surgical margin assessment during robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) were examined through simulation, bench-top experimentation, and ex vivo tissue studies. Three probe designs with 8, 9, and 17 electrodes, respectively, were analyzed through finite element method based simulations. One mm diameter spherical inclusions ( σinclusion = 1 S/m) are positioned at various locations within a hemispherical background ( σbackground = 0.1 S/m) of radius 5 mm. An 8-electrode configuration is not able to localize the inclusion at these positions while 9 and 17-electrode configurations are able to accurately reconstruct the inclusion at maximum depth of 1 mm and 3 mm, respectively. All three probe designs were constructed and evaluated using saline phantoms and ex vivo porcine and human prostate tissues. The 17-electrode probe performed best in saline phantom studies, accurately reconstructing high contrast, 1-mm-diameter metal cylindrical inclusions in a saline bath ( σsaline = 0.1 S/m) with a position and area error of 0.46 mm and 0.84 mm2, respectively. Additionally, the 17-electrode probe was able to adequately distinguish cancerous from benign tissues in three ex vivo human prostates. Simulations, bench-top saline experiments, and ex vivo tissue sampling suggest that for intraoperative surgical margin assessment during RALP, the 17-electrode probe (as compared to an 8 and 9 electrode probe) will be necessary to provide sufficient accuracy and sensitivity.

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