A NEW breakthrough in breast cancer treatment has sparked hopes patients could be treated faster and more effectively.
Scientists have created a tiny microscope that can place previously unreachable body tissue under the lens.
This device could accelerate breast cancer treatment by producing images of tissue with “unprecedented speed,” according to experts at Imperial College London.
It is less than 1mm in diameter, which is around the width of 25 human hairs put together.
Dr Khushi Vyas and colleagues at Imperial College London hope the endo-microscope will allow them to identify cancerous cells a hundredth of a millimetre in size.