Malignant tumors differentiated from benign skin conditions by ultrasound with elastography
High-frequency ultrasound with elastography can help
differentiate between cancerous and benign skin conditions, according to a study
presented at the 2009 annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America
(RSNA).
"High-frequency ultrasound with elastography has the
potential to improve the efficiency of skin cancer diagnosis," said lead author
Eliot L. Siegel, M.D., vice chairman of the Department of Radiology at the University
of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSM) in Baltimore. "It successfully delineated
the extent of lesions and was able to provide measurable differentiation among
a variety of benign and malignant lesions."
Suspicious skin lesions are typically diagnosed by dermatologists
and biopsied based on their surface appearance and characteristics. Unfortunately,
even to experienced dermatologists, benign and malignant lesions often appear
similar visually and on physical examination, and some malignant lesions may have
a benign appearance, especially in their early stages. It is not uncommon for
patients to have one or more lesions that appear concerning.
"Dermatologists tend to biopsy any lesions that seem
visually suspicious for disease," said coauthor Bahar Dasgeb, M.D., from the Department
of Dermatology at Wayne State University in Detroit and Pinkus Dermatopathology
Lab in Monroe, Michigan. "Consequently, many benign lesions are needlessly biopsied
in order to avoid the risk of missing a potentially deadly melanoma."
Elastography was found to distinguish between benign
and malignant lesions not by their visible appearance but by measuring their elasticity
or stiffness. Since malignancies are stiffer than benign growths, elastography,
when added to high-frequency ultrasound imaging of the skin, has potential to
improve the accuracy of traditional clinical diagnosis of skin cancers and, in
some cases, eliminate unnecessary biopsies of benign skin lesions. The procedure
is noninvasive, convenient and inexpensive.
For the study, researchers used an ultra high-frequency
ultrasound system to image 40 patients with a variety of malignant and nonmalignant
skin lesions. Malignant tumors included squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma
and melanoma. Benign lesions included dermatofibroma and lipoma.
The researchers calculated the ratio of elasticity between
normal skin and the adjacent skin lesion, and used laboratory analysis to confirm
their diagnoses. Cystic lesions, which are not malignant, demonstrated high levels
of elasticity, while malignant lesions were significantly less elastic. The elasticity
ratio of normal skin to the various skin lesions ranged from 0.04 to 0.3 for cystic
skin lesions to above 10.0 for malignant lesions.
In addition, high-frequency ultrasound with elastography
allows for accurate characterization of the extent and depth of the lesion below
the surface, which can aid physicians in treatment.
"The visualized portion of a skin lesion can be just
the tip of the iceberg, and most dermatologists operate 'blindly' beyond what
they can see on the surface," Dr. Siegel said. "High-frequency ultrasound provides
almost microscopic resolution and enables us to get size, shape and extent of
the lesion prior to biopsy."
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