Microwave imaging for neoadjuvant chemotherapy monitoring: initial clinical experience BREAST CANCER RESEARCH Meaney, P. M., Kaufman, P. A., Muffly, L. S., Click, M., Poplack, S. P., Wells, W. A., Schwartz, G. N., di Florio-Alexander, R. M., Tosteson, T. D., Li, Z., Geimer, S. D., Fanning, M. W., Zhou, T., Epstein, N. R., Paulsen, K. D. 2013; 15 (2)

Abstract

Microwave tomography recovers images of tissue dielectric properties, which appear to be specific for breast cancer, with low-cost technology that does not present an exposure risk, suggesting the modality may be a good candidate for monitoring neoadjuvant chemotherapy.Eight patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy for locally advanced breast cancer were imaged longitudinally five to eight times during the course of treatment. At the start of therapy, regions of interest (ROIs) were identified from contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging studies. During subsequent microwave examinations, subjects were positioned with their breasts pendant in a coupling fluid and surrounded by an immersed antenna array. Microwave property values were extracted from the ROIs through an automated procedure and statistical analyses were performed to assess short term (30 days) and longer term (four to six months) dielectric property changes.Two patient cases (one complete and one partial response) are presented in detail and demonstrate changes in microwave properties commensurate with the degree of treatment response observed pathologically. Normalized mean conductivity in ROIs from patients with complete pathological responses was significantly different from that of partial responders (P value = 0.004). In addition, the normalized conductivity measure also correlated well with complete pathological response at 30 days (P value = 0.002).These preliminary findings suggest that both early and late conductivity property changes correlate well with overall treatment response to neoadjuvant therapy in locally advanced breast cancer. This result is consistent with earlier clinical outcomes that lesion conductivity is specific to differentiating breast cancer from benign lesions and normal tissue.

View details for DOI 10.1186/bcr3418

View details for Web of Science ID 000330612000018

View details for PubMedID 23621959

View details for PubMedCentralID PMC3672734