We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

HospiMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News AI Critical Care Surgical Techniques Patient Care Health IT Point of Care Business Focus

RF Technology Devised to Localize Breast Tumors

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 27 Oct 2014
Print article
For women undergoing breast cancer surgery, a localization wire is inserted into the breast through a needle to help mark the location of a tumor or benign mass on the day of surgery. For the patient, it is one another phase of what is an already painful and emotionally distressing process.

For a team of University of Wisconsin (UW)-Madison (USA) engineers and clinicians, this was an opportunity to develop a solution that is technologically refined, precise, and patient-centric. The investigator’s solution—a system that replaces the localization wire with a radiofrequency tag that helps the surgeon track the tumor’s location with greater precision—was the motivation for the researchers to establish the company Elucent Medical (Madison, WI, USA).

Dan van der Weide, a UW-Madison professor of electrical and computer engineering and one of Elucent’s founders, discusses the localization wire with palpable dismay. “It’s not something I think I would wish on anyone,” he said. “It’s stressful to place this wire on the day of a difficult surgery.”

Moreover, from an engineer’s perspective, the localization wire creates all kinds of hurdles to removing a tumor while maintaining as much healthy breast tissue as possible. For instance, the wire is inserted when the breast is compressed in a mammogram machine or under ultrasound guidance. If the mass or cancer is in the center of the breast, there may be a distance of more than two inches from that mass to the skin where the wire must exit. “I get a 2D [two-dimensional] picture of where the wire is in the breast, but it’s a 3-D event—and requires piecing the pictures together to find the cancer,” said Elucent’s Lee Wilke, director of the UW Health Breast Center and a UW-Madison professor of surgery.

The localization wire, at best, is simply marking one point along the boundary of the tumor, leaving it to the surgeon to determine out the rest of the picture. “The wire can be very biased, because it only comes from one direction,” Dr. Wilke noted. “It’s been this way for more than 30 years.”

One possible workaround is to implant a small radioactive pellet at the location of the tumor, then track it with a handheld radiation detector. However, Dr. Wilke emphasized that cancer clinicians are already exposed to a lot of radiation, and putting them at even more risk clearly is not a good idea.

Radiofrequency identification (RFID), a widespread technology with many applications in tracking and communication, offers a compromise. The solution depends on expanding the scope of a relatively simple technology with many everyday uses. A pet animal that has been “microchipped” has been implanted with an integrated circuit that uses RFID technology to transmit identifying information when scanned. One of Elucent’s key technical challenges is to create a new kind of RFID tag that will better modify the technology to localization purposes.

“There’s no facility for saying, look, the tag is precisely 3.5-cm deep and over 1 cm from where your reader is,” Prof. van der Weide stated. He is now working on designing a coil array that can wrap around an RFID tag and provide more precise location data via a wand-like reader in the operating room.

Surgeons such as Dr. Wilke would approve a practical option to the localization wire, provided it is easy to learn and use, and Prof. van der Weide noted that Elucent’s solution to the problem is not really all that complex. In fact, the device makes the treatment process less expensive and logistically simpler. Because the tag could be implanted while the patient undergoes a biopsy, it essentially eliminates not only the wire but also the entire localization wire-implant procedure, which the company reported can save up to USD 2,500 per patient.

Before Elucent can replace the localization wire with what is basically a small metal pellet, the engineers will modify the object’s design and seek regulatory approval. But the team is confident that stepping back and rethinking an outdated procedure will elevate the standards of care and dignity for breast cancer patients. “A lot of medical procedures evolved out of an immediate need, and common sense and simplicity weren’t at the forefront,” Prof. van der Weide commented.

Related Links:

University of Wisconsin-Madison
Elucent Medical


Gold Member
Disposable Protective Suit For Medical Use
Disposable Protective Suit For Medical Use
Gold Member
POC Blood Gas Analyzer
Stat Profile Prime Plus
Silver Member
Compact 14-Day Uninterrupted Holter ECG
NR-314P
New
Enterprise Imaging & Reporting Solution
Syngo Carbon

Print article

Channels

Critical Care

view channel
Image: The new risk assessment tool determines patient-specific risks of developing unfavorable outcomes with heart failure (Photo courtesy of 123RF)

Powerful AI Risk Assessment Tool Predicts Outcomes in Heart Failure Patients

Heart failure is a serious condition where the heart cannot pump sufficient blood to meet the body's needs, leading to symptoms like fatigue, weakness, and swelling in the legs and feet, and it can ultimately... Read more

Surgical Techniques

view channel
Image: The multi-sensing device can be implanted into blood vessels to help physicians deliver timely treatment (Photo courtesy of IIT)

Miniaturized Implantable Multi-Sensors Device to Monitor Vessels Health

Researchers have embarked on a project to develop a multi-sensing device that can be implanted into blood vessels like peripheral veins or arteries to monitor a range of bodily parameters and overall health status.... Read more

Patient Care

view channel
Image: The portable, handheld BeamClean technology inactivates pathogens on commonly touched surfaces in seconds (Photo courtesy of Freestyle Partners)

First-Of-Its-Kind Portable Germicidal Light Technology Disinfects High-Touch Clinical Surfaces in Seconds

Reducing healthcare-acquired infections (HAIs) remains a pressing issue within global healthcare systems. In the United States alone, 1.7 million patients contract HAIs annually, leading to approximately... Read more

Health IT

view channel
Image: First ever institution-specific model provides significant performance advantage over current population-derived models (Photo courtesy of Mount Sinai)

Machine Learning Model Improves Mortality Risk Prediction for Cardiac Surgery Patients

Machine learning algorithms have been deployed to create predictive models in various medical fields, with some demonstrating improved outcomes compared to their standard-of-care counterparts.... Read more

Point of Care

view channel
Image: The Quantra Hemostasis System has received US FDA special 510(k) clearance for use with its Quantra QStat Cartridge (Photo courtesy of HemoSonics)

Critical Bleeding Management System to Help Hospitals Further Standardize Viscoelastic Testing

Surgical procedures are often accompanied by significant blood loss and the subsequent high likelihood of the need for allogeneic blood transfusions. These transfusions, while critical, are linked to various... Read more