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MU researchers Jon Dyer,
Yubin Miao and John Viator are combining lasers and drugs
to fight skin cancer.
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MU
Doctors Use Sound to
Battle Melanoma
By Christian Basi
When treating skin cancer, differentiating
between melanoma and healthy moles can be difficult. Doctors must
know the shape of the cancer and how deep it is before treating
the problem. Now, a skin care specialist at the University of
Missouri-Columbia has teamed with MU engineering and internal
medicine professors to develop a better identification and treatment
process.
“The incidence and mortality rates associated
with melanoma have increased as much as 7 percent in recent years,” said Yubin Miao, a research assistant professor in internal
medicine. “Early melanoma tumor diagnosis and prompt
surgical removal are a patient's best hope for a cure. Unfortunately,
metastatic melanoma is resistant to current chemotherapy and immunotherapy
regimens.”
Currently, technology can make identification
of melanoma difficult. To treat the affected areas on the skin,
doctors must know what areas are dangerous and, at the same time,
identify healthy cells, which they avoid during the treatment.
Miao is using radiopharmaceuticals, while his colleagues investigate
the lasers that produce sound, to treat and detect cancerous moles.
Using diagnostic and therapeutic elements
such as technetium-99m and rhenium-188, Miao is attempting to
target receptors on the over-expressed cells of cancerous moles.
He uses the technetium to visualize the melanoma and the rhenium
to treat it. Since the therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals will be
delivered selectively to the melanoma cells, the radiation dose
to normal tissues and organs will be minimal.
“Using a drug that would only identify
deadly moles would help us immensely,” said Jon Dyer, assistant
professor of dermatology.
“Nearly 60,000 people each year develop melanoma. The earlier
we detect it the better a survival rate. A detection tool that
is specific and accurate will help us fight this very dangerous
problem much more efficiently.”
Once an abnormal mole or cancer is detected,
the next step is to create a detailed picture of the cancer site.
John Viator, an assistant professor of biological
engineering, is employing lasers to generate a high-resolution
picture of the affected area through photoacoustics, which is
a laser-induced ultrasound, but much more detailed. While ultrasound
generates sound waves and listens to the echoes to create grainy
pictures, Viator uses low-energy lasers to target blood vessels,
creating a sound wave inside the body. A special listening device
then detects these sounds and creates a detailed picture on a
computer. While an ultrasound's resolution is about one millimeter,
the laser may create a resolution of about 10 microns.
One difference between using the laser instead
of the ultrasound is that the laser can only penetrate the skin
by a few millimeters. Though laser-induced ultrasound is not suitable
for imaging deep organs, it is ideal for creating highly detailed
pictures of the skin's structure. These detailed pictures can
show skin specialists the exact size and shape of the dangerous
skin cells and how far they penetrate. Specialists such as Dyer
can then pinpoint therapeutic strategies to destroy the bad skin
cells without ever touching the healthy cells.
“This research opens myriad possibilities,” Dyer said. “Currently, when we want to rid the skin of a
dangerous birthmark or mole, we destroy the blood vessels in the
area, but too much heat can destroy melanin and healthy skin cells.
With the new technology, we will be able to target individual
cells, thus reducing the damage to healthy tissue but increasing
our accuracy to destroy the cancer.”
Dyer said that skin specialists also will
be able to treat non-cancerous marks on the skin that are a result
of capillary malformations, typically called port wine stains.
While they do not carry a risk of developing into a cancer, these
port wine stains can be a burden cosmetically. Using photoacoustics,
doctors could characterize the moles better and have a better
success rate in treating the marks.
The researchers expect to begin using the
technology in clinical applications within the next two years.
A pilot study has been scheduled for this summer.
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Last Update:
March 12, 2007
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