MRI predicts cancer treatment efficacy
4/19/2005 Ann Arbor, MI Philip Svabik The Michigan Daily People diagnosed with brain cancer may soon have access to more effective therapy options, thanks to an advanced MRI scan that can chart the success of a particular treatment early on in the course of therapy, a new University of Michigan study suggests. Currently, once a patient is diagnosed with brain cancer, they enter into therapeutic treatment of either radiation therapy or chemotherapy for about six to seven weeks. Patients then must wait six to twelve weeks after the treatment period has ended to return for a follow up image that will prove if the treatment was effective or not. “If you didn’t respond to the treatment, then you have gone through almost three months of ineffective intervention,” said Brian Ross, a professor of radiology and biological chemistry at the University and one of the study’s 14 authors. “And now you are faced with the gloomy task of essentially deciding what you are going to select next in consultation with your physician,” he added. However, Ross and his colleagues have found that by using a special MRI scan, called an MRI diffusion map, they can evaluate the effectiveness of the treatment at a mere three weeks into it — roughly 10 weeks earlier than if standard MRI imaging procedures were used. Diffusion MRI works by measuring the flow of the water surrounding the brain through the tumor, which helps measure the density of the tumor. The researchers found that if after [...]