Title of article :
MR Imaging-Histology Correlation by Tailored 3D-Printed Slicer in Oncological Assessment
Author/Authors :
Baldi, D Napoli, Italy , Aiello, M Napoli, Italy , Duggento, A Department of Biomedicine and Prevention - University of Rome “Tor Vergata” - Rome, Italy , Salvatore, M Napoli, Italy , Cavaliere, C Napoli, Italy
Abstract :
3D printing and reverse engineering are innovative technologies that are revolutionizing scientific research in the health sciences
and related clinical practice. Such technologies are able to improve the development of various custom-made medical devices
while also lowering design and production costs. Recent advances allow the printing of particularly complex prototypes whose
geometry is drawn from precise computer models designed on in vivo imaging data. This review summarizes a new method for
histological sample processing (applicable to e.g., the brain, prostate, liver, and renal mass) which employs a personalized mold
developed from diagnostic images through computer-aided design software and 3D printing. Through positioning the custom
mold in a coherent manner with respect to the organ of interest (as delineated by in vivo imaging data), the cutting instrument can
be precisely guided in order to obtain blocks of tissue which correspond with high accuracy to the slices imaged. This approach
appeared crucial for validation of new quantitative imaging tools, for an accurate imaging-histopathological correlation and for
the assessment of radiogenomic features extracted from oncological lesions. The aim of this review is to define and describe 3D
printing technologies which are applicable to oncological assessment and slicer design, highlighting the radiological and
pathological perspective as well as recent applications of this approach for the histological validation of and correlation with
MR images.
Keywords :
MR , Histology , Oncological
Journal title :
Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging