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Scientific News Health care Diagnostics of diseases NEW MEDICAL SYSTEM FOR COLON CANCER SCREENING
NEW MEDICAL SYSTEM FOR COLON CANCER SCREENING
With funding from the Office
of Naval Research (ONR) and other agencies,
Professor Arie Kaufman, Chair and Leading Professor at the State University of
New York (SUNY) Stony Brook Computer Science Department, has developed an
innovative procedure called Virtual Colonoscopy. It is an accurate,
cost-effective, fast, non-invasive, patient-comfortable procedure for screening
of colon polyps, the precursor of cancer. In contrast, conventional colonoscopy
is invasive with a risk of puncturing the colon and requires that the patient be
sedated. The negative perception of this method and the reluctance of the
general public to get screened play a major role in colorectal cancer being the
second leading cause of cancer related death in America. Virtual Colonoscopy is
a breakthrough alternative procedure which can identify colon polyps before
cancer spreads, is patient friendly, and can be preformed within 15 minutes with
minimum risk.
ONR has supported Kaufman’s investigation of
volumetric (voxel-based) modeling and rendering algorithms that comprise the
techniques used to render the virtual colon and visualize it interactively in
real time. In Virtual Colonoscopy, a 40-second single-breath-hold computed
tomography (CT) scan of the patient’s abdomen is taken. Volume visualization
is then used to virtually navigate within an automatically segmented and
reconstructed 3D model of the colon, searching for polyps. Research has led to
the development of patented “electronic cleansing” methods for removing
residual stool from the colon in the 3D model to avoid the need for harsh bowel
cleansing and significantly reducing false positives. The visualization
software, running on a PC, allows physicians to interactively navigate through
the colon. An intuitive user interface with customized tools supports “virtual
biopsy” to inspect suspicious regions. Clinical studies demonstrated the
effectiveness of the Virtual Colonoscopy in imaging and detecting polyps as
small as 3 mm in diameter. The current procedure is being extended to
interactive 3D virtual endoscopy for visualizing the interior of other organs,
such as the heart, arteries, lungs, and stomach.
The technology has been licensed to Viatronix
Inc. (Stony Brook, NY), which has installed over two-dozen Virtual Colonoscopy
V3D-ColonTM systems in the US, including National Naval Medical Center –
Bethesda, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and Naval Hospital – San Diego.
These machines have already scanned over 1000 patients.
In addition to the medical application discussed
here, Kaufman’s volume graphics algorithms have been widely used in scientific
data visualization and also to render battlefield scenes.
###
The set of figures above demonstrate the
steps of the Virtual Colonoscopy procedure. Movies showing the navigation
through the colon where actual polyps are identified from real data can be
viewed at http://www.cs.sunysb.edu/~vislab/animations/colonoscopy/
Contact: Gail Cleere, cleereg@onr.navy.mil,
703-696-4987, Office
of Naval Research
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Office
of Naval Research
Publishing date: February 20, 2002
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