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Research Update
Needle-size device to track tumours, radiation dose
Mumbai
Engineers
at Purdue University are creating a wireless device designed to inject into
tumours to tell doctors about the precise dose of radiation received and locate
the exact position of tumours during treatment. The information would help to
more effectively kill tumours, said Babak Ziaie, an Associate Professor at the
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and a researcher at Purdue's
Birck Nanotechnology Center.
Ziaie is leading a team that has tested a prototype wireless implantable passive
micro-dosimeter and said that the device could be in clinical trials in 2010.
"Because organs and tumours shift inside the body during treatment, a new
technology is needed to tell doctors the exact dosage of radiation received
by a tumour," said Ziaie, who has a dual appointment in Purdue's Weldon
School of Biomedical Engineering. The prototype is enclosed in a glass capillary
small enough to inject into a tumour with a syringe. Research findings are detailed
in a paper appeared in the IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. The
paper was written by doctoral student Chulwoo Son and Ziaie.
While conventional imaging systems can provide a three-dimensional fix on a
tumour's shifting position during therapy, these methods are difficult to use
during radiation therapy, are costly and sometimes require X-rays, which can
damage tissue when used repeatedly, Ziaie said. The new device uses radio frequency
identification, or RFID, technology, which does not emit damaging X-rays. The
device, which has no batteries and will be activated with electrical coils placed
next to the patient, contains a miniature version of dosimeters worn by workers
in occupations involving radioactivity. The tiny dosimeter could provide up-to-date
information about the cumulative dose a tumour is receiving over time.
"It's a radiation dosimeter and a tracking device in the same capsule and
will be hermetically sealed so that it will not have to be removed from the
body," Ziaie said. The same researchers in 2006 reported findings on the
first such miniature device. However, the earlier prototype lacked adequate
sensitivity, was too large and not suitable for easy implantation, he added.
New findings detail the development of a miniaturised and more sensitive dosimeter
that can be implanted using a hypodermic needle. Researchers tested the prototype
with radioactive cobalt.
The researchers have been funded by the National Science Foundation, and recently
received a two-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to continue
the work. Over that time, the research team will work to simplify the fabrication
process so that the devices could be manufactured inexpensively. A key advantage
of the technology is that it does not require intricate circuitry, which could
make the device easier and less expensive to manufacture than more complex designs.
The system consists of simple electronic devices called capacitors and coils.
The device has a diameter of about 2.5 millimetres, or thousandths of a meter,
and is about 2 centimetres long, making it small enough to fit inside a large-diameter
needle for injection with a syringe. The current size is small enough to be
used in tumours, but researchers will work to shrink the device to about half
a millimetre in diameter and half its current length, roughly the size of a
rice grain, said Ziaie, who is working with Byunghoo Jung, a Purdue Assistant
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. The Purdue engineers also
are working with researchers at the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center
at Dallas.
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