the more images the better, he says. the bra, which generates high-quality images, would provide a rich data set, in a convenient and inexpensive way, to extrapolate the information needed to see the stiffness of the breast, and therefore the presence of cancer tumours.
“what we’re trying to do is bring the (imaging) technology that is currently only really available on the mri to be much more accessible to women,” he says.
elijah says the bra prototype will be tested next month. in the coming years, it could be used to screen women with dense breasts, at high risk for cancer or already in breast-cancer treatment to see if chemotherapy or radiation is working to reduce the size of tumours.
in another part of the country, a physicist is also trying to develop a way of finding early signs of breast cancer. having dense breasts is a known risk factor for breast cancer, which means you have more milk glands, milk ducts and supportive tissue than fatty tissue in your breasts. mammography, which looks at breast density, is currently considered the most reliable method of finding breast cancer.
but breast density can be normal or cancerous, says alla reznik, a canada research chair in physics of molecular imaging and a professor of physics at lakehead university in thunder bay, ont. because dense breast tissue can hide cancer, mammography is no longer considered the gold standard for women who have dense breasts or who have been identified as high risk, she says.