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Microwave Imaging to Improve Breast Cancer Diagnosis

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most prevalent type of cancer worldwide. The correct diagnosis of Axillary Lymph Nodes (ALNs) is important for an accurate staging of breast cancer. The performance of current imaging modalities for both breast cancer detection and staging is still unsatisfactory. Microwave Imaging (MWI) has been studied to aid breast cancer diagnosis. This thesis addresses several novel aspects of the development of air-operated MWI systems for both breast cancer detection and staging. Firstly, refraction effects in air-operated setups are evaluated to understand whether refraction calculation should be included in image reconstruction algorithms. Then, the research completed towards the development of a MWI system to detect the ALNs is presented. Anthropomorphic numerical phantoms of the axillary region are created, and the dielectric properties of ALNs are estimated from Magnetic Resonance Imaging exams. The first pre-clinical MWI setup tailored to detect ALNs is numerically and experimentally tested. To complement MWI results, the feasibility of using machine learning algorithms to classify healthy and metastasised ALNs using microwave signals is analysed. Finally, an additional study towards breast cancer detection is presented by proposing a prototype which uses a focal system to focus the energy into the breast and decrease the coupling between antennas. The results show refraction calculation may be neglected in low to moderate permittivity media. Moreover, MWI has the potential as an imaging technique to assess ALN diagnosis as estimation of dielectric properties indicate there is sufficient contrast between healthy and metastasised ALNs, and the imaging results obtained in this thesis are promising for ALN detection. The performance of classification models shows these models may potentially give complementary information to imaging results. The proposed breast imaging prototype also shows promising results for breast cancer detection

Similar works

This paper was published in Universidade de Lisboa: Repositório.UL.

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