4.6 Article

An MRI-Guided Ring High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound System for Noninvasive Breast Ablation

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TUFFC.2020.2992764

Keywords

Transducers; Magnetic resonance imaging; Breast; Skin; Acoustics; Cancer; Temperature measurement; Animal study; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) thermometry; ring phased array; skin burn; system integration

Funding

  1. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 106-2221-E-400-001]
  2. National Health Research Institutes [BN 108-PP-10]

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High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) has been used for noninvasive treatment of breast tumors, but the present magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided HIFU (MRI-HIFU) systems encounter skin burn. In this study, a novel MRI-HIFU breast ablation system was developed to improve the above problem. The system consisted of the ring HIFU phased-array transducer, a commercial power amplifier, the mechanical positioner, and the graphical user interface control software. MRI thermometry was also established to monitor the temperature in the HIFU-treated tissue. Ablation of pork and the in vivo rabbit leg were carried out to validate the developed system. Results of fat-surrounding pork ablation showed that the ring HIFU system reached a safe margin of 3 mm without fat burn. Moreover, precision of the positioner moving the HIFU focal zone was within 6% error under MRI circumstances. The representative MRI temperature images show that the peak temperatures among the five ablations ranged between 66 degrees C and 91 degrees C, and their thermal doses were over 10000. The system could also ablate the biceps femoris of a rabbit without skin burn to form a lesion of 2.5 mm beneath the skin. With the HIFU dose of 315 W/10 s, the MRI temperature map revealed that the maximum temperature and the thermal dose were 60 degrees C and 3380, respectively. The MRI-guided ring HIFU system can ablate the target tissue near subcutaneous fat without fat burn. The system prototype is a promising tool for clinical implementation.

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