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Dive into the research topics where David Beylin is active.

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Featured researches published by David Beylin.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2003

Positron emission mammography: initial clinical results.

Edward A. Levine; Rita I. Freimanis; Nancy D. Perrier; Kathryn A. Morton; Nadia M. Lesko; Simon Bergman; Kim R. Geisinger; Rodney C. Williams; Connie Sharpe; Valera Zavarzin; Irving N. Weinberg; Pavel Y. Stepanov; David Beylin; Kathryn Lauckner; Mohan Doss; Judy Lovelace; Lee P. Adler

Background: Evaluation of high-risk mammograms represents an enormous clinical challenge. Functional breast imaging coupled with mammography (positron emission mammography [PEM]) could improve imaging of such lesions. A prospective study was performed using PEM in women scheduled for stereotactic breast biopsy.Methods: Patients were recruited from the surgical clinic. Patients were injected with 10 mCi of 2-[18F] fluorodeoxyglucose. One hour later, patients were positioned on the stereotactic biopsy table, imaged with a PEM scanner, and a stereotactic biopsy was performed. Imaging was reviewed and compared with pathologic results.Results: There were 18 lesions in 16 patients. PEM images were analyzed by drawing a region of interest at the biopsy site and comparing the count density in the region of interest with the background. A lesion-to-background ratio >2.5 appeared to be a robust indicator of malignancy and yielded a sensitivity of 86%, specificity of 91%, and overall diagnostic accuracy of 89%. No adverse events were associated with the PEM imaging.Conclusions: The data show that PEM is safe, feasible, and has an encouraging accuracy rate in this initial experience. Lesion-to-background ratios >2.5 were found to be a useful threshold value for identifying positive (malignant) results. This study supports the further development of PEM.


Technology in Cancer Research & Treatment | 2005

Positron Emission Mammography: High-Resolution Biochemical Breast Imaging:

Irving N. Weinberg; David Beylin; Valera Zavarzin; Steve Yarnall; Pavel Y. Stepanov; E. V. Anashkin; Deepa Narayanan; Sergei Dolinsky; Kathrin Lauckner; Lee P. Adler

Positron emission mammography (PEM) provides images of biochemical activity in the breast with spatial resolution matching individual ducts (1.5 mm full-width at half-maximum). This spatial resolution, supported by count efficiency that results in high signal-to-noise ratio, allows confident visualization of intraductal as well as invasive breast cancers. Clinical trials with a full-breast PEM device have shown high clinical accuracy in characterizing lesions identified as suspicious on the basis of conventional imaging or physical examination (sensitivity 93%, specificity 83%, area under the ROC curve of 0.93), with high sensitivity preserved (91%) for intraductal cancers. Increased sensitivity did not come at a cost of reduced specificity. Considering that intraductal cancer represents more than 30% of reported cancers, and is the form of cancer with the highest probability of achieving surgical cure, it is likely that the use of PEM will complement anatomic imaging modalities in the areas of surgical planning, high-risk monitoring, and minimally invasive therapy. The quantitative nature of PET promises to assist researchers interested studying the response of putative cancer precursors (e.g., atypical ductal hyperplasia) to candidate prevention agents.


international symposium on biomedical imaging | 2004

Applications of a PET device with 1.5 mm FWHM intrinsic spatial resolution to breast cancer imaging

Irving N. Weinberg; David Beylin; Steve Yarnall; E. V. Anashkin; Pavel Y. Stepanov; Sevgei Dolinsky; Valera Zavarzin; William Peter; Kathrin Lauckner; Kathryn A. Morton; Rita I. Freimanis; Nadia M. Lesko; Edward A. Levine; Nancy D. Perrier; Judy Lovelace; Kim R. Geisinger; Rodney C. Williams; Scott Wollenweber; Deepa Narayanan; Mohan Doss; Jean Hummel; Elin R. Sigurdson; Kathryn Evers; Michael Torosian; Lee P. Adler

Operation of a high resolution compact clinical PET Scanner (PEM Flex/spl trade/) device as a breast scanner is described. The device features high spatial resolution (1.5 mm FWHM intrinsic resolution) as a result of small crystals and compact position-sensitive photomultipliers. The compactness of the system allows it to reside within a stereotactic X-ray mammography unit, or as a separate standalone system capable of breast compression. The gamma rays are detected for a volumetric reconstruction by two heads, each of which contains 2,028 2 mm by 2 mm by 10 mm lutetium-containing crystals. The heads travel within X-ray transparent compression paddles. A window is provided in one of the paddles for direct correlation with ultrasound transducers and for interventional access. To enable real-time interventions, images are reconstructed and displayed while the detectors are still acquiring data. The maximum-likelihood reconstruction provides quantitative images with threefold improved contrast as compared to simple back-projections.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2015

Markerless head tracking evaluation with human subjects for a dedicated brain PET scanner

Sergey Anishchenko; David Beylin; Pavel Y. Stepanov; Alex Stepanov; Irving N. Weinberg; Stephen Schaeffer; Valery Zavarzin; D. G. Shaposhnikov; Mark F. Smith

The goal of this work was to evaluate a markerless head motion tracking system for a dedicated brain PET scanner. Data were collected for human subjects during a mock PET scan. Head pose was tracked with four calibrated web cameras and a magnetic motion tracking device. Results were compared to evaluate the markerless system tracking performance. The average mismatch of positions from optical tracking vs. the magnetic sensors was 1.6 mm. Markerless head tracking with video cameras is viable for a dedicated brain PET scanner.


Archive | 2003

Open-access emission tomography scanner

Irving N. Weinberg; David Beylin; Pavel Stepanov; Steve Yarnall; Valera Zawarzin


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2007

Quantitative improvement in breast lesion detectability on delayed images using high resolution positron emission mammography

Lee P. Adler; Deepa Narayanan; Linda Gammage; David Beylin; Rochelle Keen


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2007

Development of Cu-64 labeled DOTA-cyanocobalamin for PET imaging

Valery Zavarzin; David Beylin; Deepa Narayanan; Sergey Mamaev; Alexandra Beylina; Pavel Y. Stepanov


Society of Nuclear Medicine Annual Meeting Abstracts | 2013

Biopsy guided by molecular breast imaging (MBI)

James Hugg; Rochelle Keen; David Beylin; E. V. Anashkin; Eileen Millsap; Ronald Moore


Archive | 2013

PORTABLE PET SCANNER FOR IMAGING THE HUMAN BRAIN

Irving N. Weinberg; David Beylin


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2007

Practical technique for the PET image-guided, minimally-invasive biopsy of breast abnormalities

David Beylin; Steven Sherry; Deepa Narayanan; Pavel Y. Stepanov; E. V. Anashkin; Valery Zavarzin

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Irving N. Weinberg

National Institutes of Health

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Pavel Stepanov

University of California

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E. V. Anashkin

Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics

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Lee P. Adler

Fox Chase Cancer Center

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