Preliminary computerised imaging reveals the shape of the prostate and a compartment within the gland--called the transitional zone--consistently differ in men with prostate cancer than those without the disease, according to new research led by Case Western Reserve University.
The finding may provide a new avenue to diagnose the disease--perhaps even the cancer's aggressiveness.
The differences held up in comparisons of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of 70 patients.
The scans came from three different medical institutions in Ohio and two in Sydney, Australia, on different makes and models of MRI's.
The research is published in Scientific Reports today.
"Looking at shape is a fundamental shift from looking at the intensity of pixels in an image to predict if a patient has prostate cancer," said Anant Madabhushi, F. Alex Nason professor II of biomedical engineering and leader of the research. "Pixel intensities vary, but shape is resilient."
Variability in MRI scans can result in disagreement as to whether prostate cancer is present, in turn potentially resulting in unnecessary biopsies and treatments.
The American College of Radiology and others are working to develop standards to eliminate inconsistencies in imaging.
"Here, we potentially have an image-based biomarker for prostate cancer, which is not greatly sensitive to the MRI parameters used by each institution, the maker of the MRI or the scanner itself, " Madabhushi said.
To find the differences in shapes, the researchers took images of 35 cancerous prostates, aligned them into a single frame and created a statistical shape atlas.
They then took images of 35 healthy prostates, aligned them in one frame and created a second statistical shape atlas.
The researchers then aligned the two frames and controlled for size -- tumours and a noncancerous condition, called benign prostatic hyperplasia (which some images in this study showed), increase the gland's volume.
Comparing cancerous and cancer-free prostates showed clear, statistically significant differences in both the shape of the transitional zone--which is in the central part of the gland--and the gland itself.
The researchers analysed and compared the images from each of the five medical institutions and found that, no matter where the images were from, differences in shapes between cancerous and cancer-free prostates were consistent.
Madabhushi said that if shape proves to be a reliable marker of cancer, it could be combined with radiomics, which employs computer algorithms to extract differentiating features in cancerous and non-cancerous tissues.
In a paper published in the December issue of the Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Madabhushi and colleagues found they could accurately identify cancer by the microarchitecture and heterogeneity of the tumour in the prostate's peripheral zone, which is the area surrounding the transitional zone.
The researchers found that aspects of cancerous features in the peripheral zone differed from cancerous features found in the rest of the gland, leading them to identify tumours there.
As with shape, the peripheral zone features held up across the institutions in Tuku, Finland; Sydney, Australia and New York City that contributed MRI scans in this study.
As a follow-up, researchers are now working to identify radiomic features from the peripheral and transitional zones along with measurements derived from the prostate shape to use as predictors of whether a patient has cancer or not.
Further, they are trying to determine whether shape can also predict if the cancer is aggressive or slow-moving--a key in determining how the disease is treated.
Source: Case Western Reserve University
We are an independent charity and are not backed by a large company or society. We raise every penny ourselves to improve the standards of cancer care through education. You can help us continue our work to address inequalities in cancer care by making a donation.
Any donation, however small, contributes directly towards the costs of creating and sharing free oncology education.
Together we can get better outcomes for patients by tackling global inequalities in access to the results of cancer research.
Thank you for your support.