FINDING EARLY-STAGE CANCERS USING NOVEL CONTRAST AGENTS FOR ENHANCED MRI

Clark Colton
Department of Chemical Engineering
Cancer deaths could be dramatically reduced with improved medical imaging
techniques for detecting early-stage tumors. While current techniques—MRI
(magnetic resonance imaging) and CT (computed tomography)—give
detailed anatomical snapshots of the body, they don’t provide
information accurate enough to clearly distinguish small, primary tumors
from surrounding tissue.
Conventional radiological approaches produce images based on
bulk structural and anatomical features of the tissue. The
degree to which a tumor
can be visualized on conventional CT or MRI depends on how the tumor
differentially scatters, absorbs, or emits radiation compared to
the surrounding tissue and inherent background noise. Therefore,
the current
approach falls short of pinpointing specific tumors at a very early
stage.
This project addresses the problems of sensitivity and specificity
with a unique MRI contrast agent. The agent enhances selectivity
for tumor tissue, thus increasing the chance for detection of an
early-stage
tumor. With early-stage detection and treatment the biggest factor
in saving the lives of cancer patients, this concept has the potential
to be a disruptive technology that will change the way imaging
for cancer is practiced.
This project continues work, funded with a prior Deshpande Center
Ignition Grant, in polymer-contrast-agent synthesis and characterization
and
in vitro studies.
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