'Virtual Tumour' Model Could Offer New Treatment for Cancer, Say Researchers

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 26 December 2018 16:11 IST
Highlights
  • Researchers from UK took the tumour sample from a patient
  • It was a one millimetre cubed piece of breast cancer tissue biopsy
  • No one has examined the geography of a tumour in this detail: researcher

Representational image

British scientists have built a novel virtual reality (VR) 3D model of cancer that will help increase the understanding of cancer as well as in the search for new treatment.

Researchers from the Cancer Research UK (CRUK) took from a patient the tumour sample - a one millimetre cubed piece of breast cancer tissue biopsy - containing around 100,000 cells, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

The team cut the tissue into wafer thin slices and scanned them. Then they stained the slices with markers to show their molecular make-up and DNA characteristics.

Advertisement

The tumour was rebuilt using VR, which was analysed within a VR laboratory.

"No one has examined the geography of a tumour in this level of detail before; it is a new way of looking at cancer," the BBC quoted Greg Hannon, Director of CRUK's Cambridge Institute, as saying. 

"Understanding how cancer cells interact with each other and with healthy tissues is critical if we are going to develop new therapies. Looking at tumours using this new system is so much more dynamic than the static 2D versions we are used to," said Karen Vousden, CRUK's chief scientist.

Advertisement

To study the tumour, the researchers became avatars within the 'virtual' laboratory whilst the cancer was represented by a multi-coloured mass of bubbles.

Although the human tissue sample was about the size of a pinhead, within the virtual laboratory it could be magnified to appear several metres across.

Advertisement

The VR system allowed the researchers to "fly through" the cells to explore the tumour in more detail.

Pointing to a group of tumour cells which escaped from the breast milk ducts, Hannon said: "This may be the point at which the cancer spread to surrounding tissue and became really dangerous. Examining the tumour in 3D allows us to capture this moment."

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: VR, CRUK
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Vivo X300 Series Confirmed to Debut With OriginOS 6, Thickness Revealed
  2. Oppo Find X9 Series Could Feature These Displays, Cameras
  3. NASA's Juno Probe Faces Silence as Mission Ends Amid Government Shutdown
  4. Tiny Asteroid 2025 TF Zooms Past Earth Undetected, Closer Than Satellites
  5. Samsung Galaxy S22 Series Receives Stable One UI 8 Update: How to Download
  6. OnePlus 15T Launch Timeline, Key Features Leaked; Might Bring This Upgrade
  7. Perseverance Spots Possible Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Over Martian Sky
  1. NASA’s Juno Probe Faces Silence as Mission Ends Amid Government Shutdown
  2. Perseverance Spots Possible Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Over Martian Sky
  3. Tiny Asteroid 2025 TF Zooms Past Earth Undetected, Closer Than Satellites
  4. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms OTT Release Revealed: Everything We Know About the Game of Thrones Prequel
  5. RBI to Introduce Pilot for Deposit Tokenisation Using CBDC Layer: Report
  6. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Open Beta Extended by a Day Till October 9
  7. MeitY's IndiaAI Mission Taps Five Projects to Drive Safe, Trusted AI in the Country
  8. FIFA World Cup Ticket NFTs Face Swiss Gambling Supervisory Authority’s Scrutiny
  9. Navi UPI Unveils Biometric-Based Payments for iOS, Android at Global Fintech Festival 2025
  10. WhatsApp's Message Translation Feature Is Rolling on iOS With Support for 21 Languages
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.