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Method for MRI-guided conformal thermal therapy of prostate with planar transurethral ultrasound heating applicators

Rajiv Chopra et al 2005 Phys. Med. Biol. 50 4957-4975   doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/50/21/001  Help

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Rajiv Chopra1, Mathieu Burtnyk1, Masoom A Haider2 and Michael J Bronskill1
1 Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, 2075 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4N 3M5, Canada
2 University Health Network, Princess Margaret Hospital, 610 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 2M9, Canada
E-mail: Rajiv.Chopra@sw.ca

Abstract. A method for conformal prostate thermal therapy using transurethral ultrasound heating applicators incorporating planar transducers is described. The capability to shape heating patterns to the geometry of the prostate gland from a single element in a multi-element heating applicator was evaluated using Bioheat transfer modelling. Eleven prostate geometries were obtained from patients who underwent MR imaging of the prostate gland prior to radical prostatectomy. Results indicate that ultrasound heating applicators incorporating multi-frequency planar transducers (4 × 20 mm, f = 4.7 MHz, 9.7 MHz) are capable of shaping thermal damage patterns to the geometry of individual prostates. A temperature feedback control algorithm has been developed to control the frequency, rotation rate and applied power level from transurethral heating applicators based on measurements of the boundary temperature during heating. The discrepancy between the thermal damage boundary and the target boundary was less than 5 mm, and the transition distance between coagulation and normal tissue was less than 1 cm. Treatment times for large prostate volumes were less than 50 min, and perfusion did not have significant impact on the control algorithm. Rectal cooling will play an important role in reducing undesired heating near the rectal wall. Experimental validation of the simulations in a tissue-mimicking gel phantom demonstrated good agreement between the predicted and generated patterns of thermal damage.

Print publication: Issue 21 (7 November 2005)
Received 10 May 2005, in final form 5 September 2005
Published 13 October 2005

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