AI Article Synopsis

  • SmartProbe is a new electrical bioimpedance sensing system that uses concentric needle electrodes for real-time cancer detection in living tissues.
  • The study introduces a statistical learning-based calibration method to improve measurement accuracy, achieving less than 6% relative error when assessing the relationship between impedance and material conductivity.
  • Experimental results show the system can effectively differentiate between cancerous and healthy tissues in various human samples, indicating its potential for broader applications in cancer diagnostics.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This study presents SmartProbe, an electrical bioimpedance (EBI) sensing system based on a concentric needle electrode (CNE). The system allows the use of commercial CNEs for accurate EBI measurement, and was specially developed for in-vivo real-time cancer detection.

Approach: Considering the uncertainties in EBI measurements due to the CNE manufacturing tolerances, we propose a calibration method based on statistical learning. This is done by extracting the correlation between the measured impedance value |Z|, and the material conductivity σ, for a group of reference materials. By utilizing this correlation, the relationship of σ and |Z| can be described as a function and reconstructed using a single measurement on a reference material of known conductivity.

Main Results: This method simplifies the calibration process, and is verified experimentally. Its effectiveness is demonstrate by results that show less than 6% relative error. An additional experiment is conducted for evaluating the system's capability to detect cancerous tissue. Four types of ex-vivo human tissue from the head and neck region, including mucosa, muscle, cartilage and salivary gland, are characterized using SmartProbe. The measurements include both cancer and surrounding healthy tissue excised from 10 different patients operated on for head and neck cancer. The measured data is then processed using dimension reduction and analyzed for tissue classification. The final results show significant differences between pathologic and healthy tissues in muscle, mucosa and cartilage specimens.

Significance: These results are highly promising and indicate a great potential for SmartProbe to be used in various cancer detection tasks.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/ab8cb4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

head neck
12
sensing system
8
neck cancer
8
cancer
5
tissue
5
smartprobe
4
smartprobe bioimpedance
4
bioimpedance sensing
4
system head
4
cancer tissue
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!