UK First in Kentucky to use Tomosynthesis for Breast
Cancer Detection
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 15, 2011) — The Comprehensive Breast Care Center at the University
of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center today announced it will begin offering
state-of-the-art digital tomosynthesis for breast cancer screening. UK will be
the only medical center in the state with this new technology.
Tomosynthesis is 3-D technology that allows radiologists to see
individual breast structures without the confusion of overlapping tissues. In
addition to providing the traditional top and side images of the breasts taken
during a regular mammogram, tomosynthesis also allows the technician to take
multiple X-ray pictures of each breast from many angles. A computer then
combines all this information into one 3-D image.
Because a scan with tomosynthesis
is more comprehensive than a regular mammogram, it is able to find much smaller
and earlier-stage cancers. A tomosynthesis exam will feel no different from a
usual mammogram, except that it takes just four seconds longer.
The
technology will be especially useful for women with dense or fatty breast
tissue. On a traditional mammogram, dense tissue can sometimes be mistaken for
cancer. More than 50 percent of women under the age of 50 and more than 30
percent of women over 50 have dense breast tissue.
Dr. Margaret Szabunio, associate
medical director of the Comprehensive Breast Care Center (CBCC) and division
chief of women’s radiology at UK
HealthCare, specializes in using tomosynthesis for the early detection of
breast cancer.
"Tomosynthesis produces
images in tiny slices that can be reconstructed into a 3-D image of the tissue,
similar to way a CT scanner works," Szabunio said. "It allows us to
look at breast tissue in a way we've never been able to before."
Dr. Mark Evers, director of the
UK Markey Cancer Center, says the new technology, along with Szabunio's
expertise, will have a significant impact on patients.
"Dr. Szabunio's experience
with tomosynthesis digital breast imaging will be of great benefit to our
patients when it comes to detecting breast cancer in its early stages,"
Evers said. "The earlier a cancer is detected, the higher a patient's
chances are for a full recovery. This technology has the potential to save
many, many lives."
The CBCC plans to begin using
tomosynthesis on patients beginning in February. Szabunio says her team will
initially implement the technology for diagnostic mammograms, meaning that
women who have had an abnormality on a regular mammogram will come in for
tomosynthesis as their follow-up. The team will then begin using tomosynthesis
as a regular screening tool for women who are at a high risk for breast cancer
or who have dense breast tissue.
MEDIA
CONTACT: Allison Perry, (859) 323-2399 or allison.perry@uky.edu.