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Showing posts with label Women's Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women's Health. Show all posts

Friday, 12 July 2019

How artificial intelligence can be used to more quickly and accurately diagnose breast cancer

New paper addresses need for early and accurate tools in diagnosing cancer

Date:
July 12, 2019
Source:
University of Southern California
Summary:
Breast ultrasound elastography is an emerging imaging technique used by doctors to help diagnose breast cancer by evaluating a lesion's stiffness in a non-invasive way. Researchers identified the critical role machine learning can play in making this technique more efficient and accurate in diagnosis.
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FULL STORY

Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death among women. It is also difficult to diagnose. Nearly one in 10 cancers is misdiagnosed as not cancerous, meaning that a patient can lose critical treatment time. On the other hand, the more mammograms a woman has, the more likely it is she will see a false positive result. After 10 years of annual mammograms, roughly two out of three patients who do not have cancer will be told that they do and be subjected to an invasive intervention, most likely a biopsy.
Breast ultrasound elastography is an emerging imaging technique that provides information about a potential breast lesion by evaluating its stiffness in a non-invasive way. Using more precise information about the characteristics of a cancerous versus non-cancerous breast lesion, this methodology has demonstrated more accuracy compared to traditional modes of imaging.
At the crux of this procedure, however, is a complex computational problem that can be time-consuming and cumbersome to solve. But what if instead we relied on the guidance of an algorithm?
Assad Oberai, USC Viterbi School of Engineering Hughes Professor in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, asked this exact question in the research paper, "Circumventing the solution of inverse problems in mechanics through deep learning: application to elasticity imaging," published in Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering. Along with a team of researchers, including USC Viterbi Ph.D student Dhruv Patel, Oberai specifically considered the following: Can you train a machine to interpret real-world images using synthetic data and streamline the steps to diagnosis? The answer, Oberai says, is most likely yes.
In the case of breast ultrasound elastography, once an image of the affected area is taken, the image is analyzed to determine displacements inside the tissue. Using this data and the physical laws of mechanics, the spatial distribution of mechanical properties -- like its stiffness -- is determined. After this, one has to identify and quantify the appropriate features from the distribution, ultimately leading to a classification of the tumor as malignant or benign. The problem is the final two steps are computationally complex and inherently challenging.
In the research, Oberai sought to determine if they could skip the most complicated steps of this workflow entirely.
Cancerous breast tissue has two key properties: heterogeneity, which means some areas are soft and some are firm, and non-linear elasticity, which means the fibers offer a lot of resistance when pulled instead of the initial give associated with benign tumors. Knowing this, Oberai created physics-based models that showed varying levels of these key properties. He then used thousands of data inputs derived from these models in order to train the machine learning algorithm.
Synthetic Versus Real-World Data
But why would you use synthetically-derived data to train the algorithm? Wouldn't real data be better?
"If you had enough data available, you wouldn't," said Oberai. "But in the case of medical imaging, you're lucky if you have 1,000 images. In situations like this where data is scarce, these kinds of techniques become important."
Oberai and his team used about 12,000 synthetic images to train their machine learning algorithm. This process is similar in many ways to how photo identification software works, learning through repeated inputs how to recognize a particular person in an image, or how our brain learns to classify a cat versus a dog. Through enough examples, the algorithm is able to glean different features inherent to a benign tumor versus a malignant tumor and make the correct determination.
Oberai and his team achieved nearly 100 percent classification accuracy on other synthetic images. Once the algorithm was trained, they tested it on real-world images to determine how accurate it could be in providing a diagnosis, measuring these results against biopsy-confirmed diagnoses associated with these images.
"We had about an 80 percent accuracy rate. Next, we continue to refine the algorithm by using more real-world images as inputs," Oberai said.
Changing How Diagnoses are Made
There are two prevailing points that make machine learning an important tool in advancing the landscape for cancer detection and diagnosis. First, machine learning algorithms can detect patterns that might be opaque to humans. Through manipulation of many such patterns, the algorithm can produce an accurate diagnosis. Secondly, machine learning offers a chance to reduce operator-to-operator error.
So then, would this replace a radiologist's role in determining diagnosis? Definitely not. Oberai does not foresee an algorithm that serves as a sole arbiter of cancer diagnosis, but instead, a tool that helps guide radiologists to more accurate conclusions. "The general consensus is these types of algorithms have a significant role to play, including from imaging professionals whom it will impact the most. However, these algorithms will be most useful when they do not serve as black boxes," said Oberai. "What did it see that led it to the final conclusion? The algorithm must be explainable for it to work as intended."
Adapting the Algorithm for Other Cancers
Because cancer causes different types of changes in the tissue it impacts, the presence of cancer in a tissue can ultimately lead to a change in its physical properties, for example a change in density or porosity. These changes are can be discerned as a signal in medical images. The role of the machine learning algorithm is to pick out this signal and use it to determine whether a given tissue that is being imaged is cancerous.
Using these ideas, Oberai and his team are working with Vinay Duddalwar, professor of clinical radiology at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, to better diagnose renal cancer through contrast enhanced CT images. Using the principles identified in training the machine learning algorithm for breast cancer diagnosis, they are looking to train the algorithm on other features that might be prominently displayed in renal cancer cases, such as changes in tissue that reflect cancer-specific changes in a patient's microvasculature, the network of microvessels that help distribute blood within tissues.
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of Southern California. Original written by Avni Shah. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/07/190712151928.htm

Wednesday, 19 June 2019

Women not aware enough of breast cancer link to alcohol

Women know too little about alcohol's role in increasing breast cancer risk, a study suggests.
19 June 2019
Woman drinking with friends
Only one in five women attending a breast cancer clinic knew it was a risk factor.
But alcohol consumption is estimated to be responsible for 5-11% of cases.
Cancer Research UK said cutting down on alcohol was one of the best things women could do to reduce their breast cancer risk.
Two hundred women took part in the study, published in the online journal BMJ Open. They were either being screened for breast cancer, or having symptoms checked.
They completed questionnaires on lifestyle-related risk factors. Just under a third knew being obese increased breast cancer risk, and half knew smoking was another risk factor. But only 16% of women in the screening group, and 23% in the symptoms group, knew that alcohol is a risk factor.
More than half of those who drank alcohol (88 out of 152) thought they knew how to estimate the alcohol content of drinks, but less than three-quarters correctly estimated the alcohol content of a standard glass of wine, and just over half correctly estimated the amount in a pint of beer.

The numbers that matter
Alcohol graphic
  • Breast cancer is the most common cancer in the UK
  • There are more than 54,000 new cases diagnosed and 11,000 deaths each year
  • Eight in 100 women will develop breast cancer during their lifetime
  • Drinking two units of alcohol a day increases the risk to 11 in 100
Around half a million women are seen at clinics to check out potential breast cancer symptoms in the UK each year.
Prof Julia Sinclair, who led the study, said it was an opportunity to give them information that could help reduce their chances of developing the disease.
"Ninety-four per cent of them don't have breast cancer. If you have a family history, you would be referred for monitoring.
"But if you're overweight or drinking more than you should be, people don't say 'there's something you could do about that'.
"Alcohol increases the risk by three per 100 so its a low absolute risk, but it's something that's modifiable,
"This is about empowering women to have the knowledge, so they can make decisions."

Alcohol-free days

Prof Sinclair said women given the all-clear from the clinics would generally be happy to be given information about alcohol risk, as long as they weren't "blamed" for drinking.
Cancer Research UK advises that breast cancer risk increases with each extra unit of alcohol per day.
"It's worrying that most women in this study didn't know alcohol raises the risk of breast cancer, as cutting down on alcohol is one of the best ways people can reduce their risk" said Emma Shields, its health information manager.
"You don't have to give alcohol up completely. Having smaller servings and more alcohol-free days can make a big difference."
She added: "Using breast screening appointments as a time to talk to women about their drinking and cancer risk is an interesting idea, but more research is needed to see how people would react to this, and whether it would actually help reduce cancer risk."

How many units of alcohol are in drinks?

Alcoholic drinks
  • Single shot of spirits (25ml): 1 unit
  • Standard (175ml) glass of wine: 2.1 units
  • Large (250ml) glass of wine: 3 units
  • Pint of 4%-strength beer: 2.3 units
  • Pint of 5%-strength beer: 2.8 units
  • Pint of strong cider (8%): 4.5 units

https://www.bbc.com/news/health-48677953

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

Men who eat two portions of yoghurt are less likely to develop bowel cancer, major study finds

Men who have two portions of yoghurt a week could cut the risk of precancerous growths by a fifth, a study suggests.
A bowl of yoghurt and fruitScientists said that two bacteria commonly found in live yogurt, may lower the number of cancer causing chemicals in the gut
 CREDIT: GETTY
Research by the University of Washington found those eating plenty of it had a significantly lower chance of developing adenoma which can lead to bowel cancer.
The study, published in Gut, which tracked more than 32,000 men for 25 years, found that those consuming at least two portions of yoghurt a week had 19 per cent fewer growths - and 26 per cent fewer of the most high-risk type.
The study was observational, and could not demonstrate why the foodstuff might have such an impact.
But scientists said that Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus, two bacteria commonly found in live yogurt, may lower the number of cancer causing chemicals in the gut.
The anti-inflammatory properties might also reduce gut leakiness, which could also protect against disease, they said. The study tracked a total of 32,606 men and 55,743 women, all of whom had a lower bowel endoscopy, which enables medics to view the inside of their gut.
Every four years they provided detailed information on lifestyle and diet - including how much yoghurt they ate. During the study period, 5,811 pre-cancerous growths developed in the men, and 8,116 in the women.
While men who ate yoghurt had a far lower risk of developing the growths, called adenoma, no association was seen in women.
Katie Patrick, health information officer, from Cancer Research UK, said: “The colon is home to trillions of microbes and how the bacteria in our gut might affect bowel cancer risk is a fascinating area of research. Lots of things affect the types of bugs in our gut and our overall gut health, including the foods we eat.
“But men don’t need to fill their shopping trolleys with yoghurt because it’s too early to say from this study whether eating more yoghurt could reduce the risk of bowel cancer. However, there is good evidence that you can reduce your risk by eating more foods high in fibre, like wholegrain bread or brown rice, and cutting down on processed and red meat.”
Bowel cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK, with almost 42,000 diagnoses annually.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/06/18/men-eat-two-portions-yoghurt-less-likely-develop-bowel-cancer/

Thursday, 13 June 2019

Two hours a week spent outdoors in nature linked with better health

Spending just 2 hours a week in green spaces such as parks, woodlands and fields has been linked with people feeling healthier and happier.

 Adam Vaughan

13 June 2019

A lady enjoying a woodland
Getty
The health benefits of being out in nature have been well-documented and will seem common sense to many of us, but until now no one has quantified exactly how much time might be beneficial. The magic number emerged from analysis of a survey of 20,000 people in England, who reported how long they spent in natural environments in the past week, plus their health and well-being.
While individuals who spent less than 2 hours in nature were no more likely to report good health or well-being than those who spent no time there at all, those who spent more than 2 hours had consistently higher health and well-being levels.
“It’s not a huge amount of time. You can spread it over the course of a week or seem to get it in a single dose, it doesn’t really matter,” says Mathew White at the University of Exeter, UK. Moreover, the threshold is within reach for most people: the analysis found that the average person spent 94 minutes a week exposed to a natural environment.

Green is good

“We have long known that nature is good for physical and mental health and putting numbers on the critical ‘dose of nature’ which gives us the best health is a really important step forward,” says Rachel Stancliffe of the Centre for Sustainable Healthcare in Oxford, UK.
After 2 hours, the health benefits of being out in nature seem to give diminishing returns, with a cut-off after 5 hours. White says that could be explained by many of that group being dog walkers who are out in nature with little choice in the matter. The team controlled for the fact that the health benefits might be a byproduct of physical activity, not contact with nature.
The magnitude of health gains of 2 hours spent in nature appear to be significant, on a par with the health differences associated between living in a well-off area and a deprived one. They also seem to apply to everyone, regardless of age, gender, long term illness or disability. “You don’t have to be running around the park, just sitting on a bench will do,” says White.
Initial findings from an European Union project due to be published later this year suggests 2 hours is not just the magic number for the English, says White, but all Europeans.
Journal reference: Scientific ReportsDOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44097-3
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2206249-two-hours-a-week-spent-outdoors-in-nature-linked-with-better-health/

Saturday, 4 May 2019

The breast cancer surgeon who got breast cancer

"Like many women, I did not check my breasts. I thought, 'it's not going to happen to me - I'm a breast cancer surgeon'."
  • 20 April 2019
Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightALEX KILBEE

Image captionLiz O'Riordan was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015

Liz O'Riordan ended up having to give up the job she had trained 20 years for, after she herself was diagnosed with breast cancer.
In 2015, at the age of 40, she had a mastectomy and last May suffered a recurrence of the disease.
Dr O'Riordan thought she would practise as a breast cancer surgeon for at least 20 years, but as it turned out she only worked as one for two years.
Radiotherapy for the second bout of cancer left her with reduced movement in her shoulder, causing her to make the "emotionally very hard" decision to give up operating.

Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightJOHN GODWIN
Image captionLiz O'Riordan now volunteers for the social enterprise Working with Cancer

Before she was diagnosed, Dr O'Riordan had found lumps that turned out only to be cysts, while a mammogram six months earlier had showed a healthy breast.
But another lump developed and her mother urged her to get it scanned. The surgeon, who lives near Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, knew what her prognosis was immediately.
"Most patients are drip-fed information. I saw that scan and I knew I'd need a mastectomy, knew I'd probably need chemo because I was young, and I had a good guess of what my chance of being alive in 10 years was, all in that split-second."
Dr O'Riordan, 43, said not many doctors develop the illnesses in which they specialise; certainly, no-one in her department at Ipswich Hospital had.

Dermot and Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightLIZ O'RIORDAN
Image captionLiz O'Riordan with her husband Dermot competing in RideLondon 100 on their tandem in 2017

At first she was "terrified", and several questions ran through her mind.
"How much can I share with my husband and my parents? How much can I stop being a cancer surgeon and just be a patient?"
Although she knew what was happening physically, she had no idea what it would be like to experience actually having the disease.
"I know what it's like to tell someone they have breast cancer.
"I didn't know what it was like to have to have a stiff upper lip, dry your tears, leave the clinic, go through the waiting room, through the hospital corridor to get to the car park and to start howling."

Armpit post-surgeryImage copyrightLIZ O'RIORDAN
Image captionScarring, fibrosis and tethering of the soft tissues on Dr O'Riordan's chest wall left her with reduced shoulder movement

After talking it through with her husband Dermot, she decided to announce her illness to her 1,500 Twitter followers, who mostly knew her through her love of baking, triathlons and her profession.
Social media, she said, ended up becoming her lifeline and she received an "outpouring of support".
"It was patients who told me how to cope.
"There is always someone awake at three o'clock in the morning to talk to you when you're on a steroid high."
Social media also put her in contact with other medical professionals with cancer, and she has since set up a WhatsApp group for medics with the disease.

Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightJOHN GODWIN
Image captionThe former consultant found she was "reliving" her own cancer when she returned to her department

After treatment for her first bout of cancer, Dr O'Riordan returned to work as a surgeon at Ipswich Hospital. But she said she didn't realise how "emotionally challenging" it would be.
She said having had cancer herself, she thought she could help people in a different way.
"But it was one of the hardest things I have ever done.
"When you're breaking bad news and telling a woman they've got cancer, it's really tough at the best of times, but I was reliving it, and I could see myself and my husband and what we would have looked like when we crumpled and heard the news.
"You're so desperate to connect with someone who has a shared experience, but I couldn't - they were my patients."
She added: "I was left with pain after my mastectomy and was suddenly operating - I was very much aware that I might give them the pain that I have, and I didn't want to do that, and it was really, really hard."

Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightLIZ O'RIORDAN
Image captionScrubbing up before surgery

She said she also struggled to sit in weekly meetings discussing patients' prognoses.
"In my first meeting back, my first patient basically had my cancer. She was the same age, she had my cancer give or take a millimetre - she was me on paper.
"I heard all my colleagues say 'that's really bad'."
In 2018, Dr O'Riordan's cancer returned to the same armpit. It was found while she was having a scan before the removal of her reconstructed breast, which had been causing her a lot of pain.
It led to a second dose of radiotherapy to the same area, "something rarely done".
She was warned that she might not be able to move her arm properly afterwards but, if she did not undergo surgery, the outlook was bleak.


The result was more scarring, fibrosis and tethering of the soft tissues, which indeed did reduce movement in her shoulder and meant she had less strength in her arm.

Dr Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightDERMOT O'RIORDAN
Image captionDr O'Riordan unveiled a statue of herself in Bury St Edmunds' Abbey Gardens last year
Presentational white space

She said her employers did their best to help her to resume her career for a second time.
"I had intensive physiotherapy, I saw an orthopaedic surgeon - because it's a huge thing to say, 'the thing I've spent 20 years of my life, and degrees, and PhDs, exams and courses to become an expert in the thing I love, I can't do again'.
"I can go about my daily life, but to be able to operate safely, that's never going to happen," she said.
By now Dr O'Riordan also felt the psychological need to have "cancer-free time", especially given that returning to work before the recurrence had been traumatic.
In addition, the risk of the cancer returning yet again was now higher than before, and there was a danger it could come back elsewhere.
After about four months she made the decision her career as a surgeon was over.
"It was bittersweet, and really, really hard saying goodbye."

Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightLIZ O'RIORDAN
Image captionDr O'Riordan took part in a half ironman in Staffordshire after her treatment in 2017
Presentational white space

Ironically, she now advises people on their rights to return to the workplace after cancer.
Dr O'Riordan, whose husband is a consultant surgeon, said she was "lucky" to be able to afford not to have to do paid work.
She recently began volunteering as an ambassador for the social enterprise, Working with Cancer, which had advised her on her employment rights after she decided to return to work in 2017, following treatment for her first bout of cancer.
A temporary director at the hospital had told her at this point that she was expected back on a phased return over four weeks.
"I was still suffering from fatigue and trying to get my brain to work again," Dr O'Riordan said.
"I didn't realise that if you've had cancer, you are classified as legally disabled under the Equality Act and your employers have to make reasonable adjustments to allow you get back to work.
"So many people are just desperate to get their lives back when they have cancer, but it can be incredibly hard to find your way and a lot of employers don't know how to help cancer patients - or whether they should."

Liz O'RiordanImage copyrightLIZ O'RIORDAN
Image captionDr O'Riordan, pictured here giving a talk in Stuttgart about patient care, is also a professional public speaker

Dr O'Riordan said most of the coaches at Working with Cancer have had the illness themselves and "they get it".
As well information about their rights, they prepare staff and employers for the emotional pitfalls.
As a result of her chemotherapy, Dr O'Riordan had short, curly hair.
Her coach asked her: "What will you do when people don't recognise you?"
She had dismissed the notion, until one day she realised a colleague she was talking to did not realise who she was.
The preparation she did with Working with Cancer mostly helped her to avoid any awkwardness.
Just before returning she emailed her line manager and explained she was happy to talk about her illness with colleagues, but not during work hours.
"You have a right to ask for things to be made easier for you. They can't sack you because that would be discrimination."
The former surgeon said her work as an ambassador had helped her reconnect with her sense of purpose.
"As a consultant surgeon I was helping 70, maybe 100 women a year with breast cancer.
"But through my book, the blogging, the talking and being an ambassador for Working with Cancer, I can help hundreds, thousands of women."

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-suffolk-47767386