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1.
J Biomed Opt ; 22(12): 1-12, 2017 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29274143

RESUMEN

Wide local excision (WLE) of tumors with negative margins remains a challenge because surgeons cannot directly visualize the mass. Fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) may improve surgical accuracy; however, conventional methods with direct surface tumor visualization are not immediately applicable, and properties of tissues surrounding the cancer must be considered. We developed a phantom model for sarcoma resection with the near-infrared fluorophore IRDye 800CW and used it to iteratively define the properties of connective tissues that typically surround sarcoma tumors. We then tested the ability of a blinded surgeon to resect fluorescent tumor-simulating inclusions with ∼1-cm margins using predetermined target fluorescence intensities and a Solaris open-air fluorescence imaging system. In connective tissue-simulating phantoms, fluorescence intensity decreased with increasing blood concentration and increased with increasing intralipid concentrations. Fluorescent inclusions could be resolved at ≥1-cm depth in all inclusion concentrations and sizes tested. When inclusion depth was held constant, fluorescence intensity decreased with decreasing volume. Using targeted fluorescence intensities, a blinded surgeon was able to successfully excise inclusions with ∼1-cm margins from fat- and muscle-simulating phantoms with inclusion-to-background contrast ratios as low as 2∶1. Indirect, subsurface FGS is a promising tool for surgical resection of cancers requiring WLE.


Asunto(s)
Imagen Óptica/instrumentación , Fantasmas de Imagen , Sarcoma/diagnóstico por imagen , Sarcoma/cirugía , Espectroscopía Infrarroja Corta/instrumentación , Cirugía Asistida por Computador/instrumentación , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Espectroscopía Infrarroja Corta/métodos
2.
J Biomed Opt ; 21(8): 80901, 2016 08 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27533438

RESUMEN

There is growing interest in using fluorescence imaging instruments to guide surgery, and the leading options for open-field imaging are reviewed here. While the clinical fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) field has been focused predominantly on indocyanine green (ICG) imaging, there is accelerated development of more specific molecular tracers. These agents should help advance new indications for which FGS presents a paradigm shift in how molecular information is provided for resection decisions. There has been a steady growth in commercially marketed FGS systems, each with their own differentiated performance characteristics and specifications. A set of desirable criteria is presented to guide the evaluation of instruments, including: (i) real-time overlay of white-light and fluorescence images, (ii) operation within ambient room lighting, (iii) nanomolar-level sensitivity, (iv) quantitative capabilities, (v) simultaneous multiple fluorophore imaging, and (vi) ergonomic utility for open surgery. In this review, United States Food and Drug Administration 510(k) cleared commercial systems and some leading premarket FGS research systems were evaluated to illustrate the continual increase in this performance feature base. Generally, the systems designed for ICG-only imaging have sufficient sensitivity to ICG, but a fraction of the other desired features listed above, with both lower sensitivity and dynamic range. In comparison, the emerging research systems targeted for use with molecular agents have unique capabilities that will be essential for successful clinical imaging studies with low-concentration agents or where superior rejection of ambient light is needed. There is no perfect imaging system, but the feature differences among them are important differentiators in their utility, as outlined in the data and tables here.


Asunto(s)
Colorantes Fluorescentes/metabolismo , Imagen Óptica , Cirugía Asistida por Computador/métodos , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Humanos , Verde de Indocianina/metabolismo , Iluminación , Cirugía Asistida por Computador/instrumentación
3.
J Biomed Opt ; 21(10): 100501, 2016 10 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27752703

RESUMEN

Lymphatic uptake of interstitially administered agents occurs by passive convective­diffusive inflow driven by interstitial concentration and pressure, while the downstream lymphatic transport is facilitated by active propulsive contractions of lymphatic vessel walls. Near-infrared fluorescence imaging in mice was used to measure these central components of lymphatic transport for the first time, using two different-sized molecules­­methylene blue (MB) and fluorescence-labeled antibody immunoglobulin G (IgG)-IRDye 680RD. This work confirms the hypothesis that lymphatic passive inflow and active propulsion rates can be separated based upon the relative differences in Stokes­Einstein diffusion coefficient. This coefficient specifically affects the passive-diffusive uptake when the interstitial volume and pressure are constant. Parameters such as mean time-to-peak signal, overall fluorescence signal intensities, and number of active peristaltic pulses, were estimated from temporal imaging data. While the mean time to attain peak signal representative of diffusion-dominated flow in the lymph vessels was 0.6±0.2??min for MB and 8±6??min for IgG, showing a size dependence, the active propulsion rates were 3.4±0.8??pulses/min and 3.3±0.5??pulses/min, respectively, appearing size independent. The propulsion rates for both dyes decreased with clearance from the interstitial injection-site, indicating intrinsic control of the smooth muscles in response to interstitial pressure. This approach to size-comparative agent flow imaging of lymphatic function can enable noninvasive characterization of diseases related to uptake and flow in lymph networks.


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Vasos Linfáticos , Imagen Óptica/métodos , Animales , Difusión , Femenino , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Colorantes Fluorescentes/farmacocinética , Sistema Linfático/diagnóstico por imagen , Sistema Linfático/metabolismo , Sistema Linfático/fisiología , Vasos Linfáticos/diagnóstico por imagen , Vasos Linfáticos/metabolismo , Vasos Linfáticos/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Desnudos
4.
Biomed Opt Express ; 7(9): 3280-3288, 2016 Sep 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27699098

RESUMEN

Fluorescence guided surgery has the potential to positively impact surgical oncology; current operating microscopes and stand-alone imaging systems are too insensitive or too cumbersome to maximally take advantage of new tumor-specific agents developed through the microdose pathway. To this end, a custom-built illumination and imaging module enabling picomolar-sensitive near-infrared fluorescence imaging on a commercial operating microscope is described. The limits of detection and system specifications are characterized, and in vivo efficacy of the system in detecting ABY-029 is evaluated in a rat orthotopic glioma model following microdose injections, showing the suitability of the device for microdose phase 0 clinical trials.

5.
J Biomed Opt ; 20(8): 80504, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26305450

RESUMEN

The use of fluorescence video imaging to guide surgery is rapidly expanding, and improvements in camera readout dynamic range have not matched display capabilities. Logarithmic intensity compression is a fast, single-step mapping technique that can map the useable dynamic range of high-bit fluorescence images onto the typical 8-bit display and potentially be a variable dynamic contrast enhancement tool. We demonstrate a ∼4.6 times improvement in image quality quantified by image entropy and a dynamic range reduction by a factor of ∼380 by the use of log-compression tools in processing in vivo fluorescence images.


Asunto(s)
Compresión de Datos/métodos , Ganglios Linfáticos/citología , Ganglios Linfáticos/cirugía , Microscopía Fluorescente/métodos , Microscopía por Video/métodos , Cirugía Asistida por Computador/métodos , Algoritmos , Animales , Aumento de la Imagen/métodos , Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador/métodos , Ratones , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad
6.
Biomed Opt Express ; 6(10): 3765-82, 2015 Oct 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26504628

RESUMEN

In fluorescence guided surgery, data visualization represents a critical step between signal capture and display needed for clinical decisions informed by that signal. The diversity of methods for displaying surgical images are reviewed, and a particular focus is placed on electronically detected and visualized signals, as required for near-infrared or low concentration tracers. Factors driving the choices such as human perception, the need for rapid decision making in a surgical environment, and biases induced by display choices are outlined. Five practical suggestions are outlined for optimal display orientation, color map, transparency/alpha function, dynamic range compression, and color perception check.

7.
Biomed Opt Express ; 6(4): 1304-17, 2015 Apr 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25909014

RESUMEN

Morbidity and complexity involved in lymph node staging via surgical resection and biopsy could ideally be improved using node assay techniques that are non-invasive. While visible blue dyes are often used to locate the sentinel lymph nodes from draining lymphatic vessels near a tumor, they do not provide an in situ metric to evaluate presence of cancer. In this study, the transport kinetics of methylene blue were analyzed to determine the potential for better in situ information about metastatic involvement in the nodes. A rat model with cancer cells in the axillary lymph nodes was used, with methylene blue injection to image the fluorescence kinetics. The lymphatic flow from injection sites to nodes was imaged and the relative kinetics from feeding lymphatic ducts relative to lymph nodes was quantified. Large variability existed in raw fluorescence and transport patterns within each cohort resulting in no systematic difference between average nodal uptake in normal, sham control and cancer-bearing nodes. However, when the signal from the afferent lymph vessel fluorescence was used to normalize the signal of the lymph nodes, the high signal heterogeneity was reduced. Using a model, the lymph flow through the nodes [Formula: see text] was estimated to be 1.49 ± 0.64 ml/g/min in normal nodes, 1.53 ± 0.45 ml/g/min in sham control nodes, and reduced to 0.50 ± 0.24 ml/g/min in cancer-cell injected nodes. This summarizes the significant difference (p = 0.0002) between cancer-free and cancer-bearing nodes in normalized flow. This process of normalized flow imaging could be used as an in situ tool to detect metastatic involvement in nodes.

8.
J Biomed Opt ; 18(4): 046008, 2013 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23584445

RESUMEN

Subsurface fluorescence imaging is desirable for medical applications, including protoporphyrin-IX (PpIX)-based skin tumor diagnosis, surgical guidance, and dosimetry in photodynamic therapy. While tissue optical properties and heterogeneities make true subsurface fluorescence mapping an ill-posed problem, ultrasound-guided fluorescence-tomography (USFT) provides regional fluorescence mapping. Here USFT is implemented with spectroscopic decoupling of fluorescence signals (auto-fluorescence, PpIX, photoproducts), and white light spectroscopy-determined bulk optical properties. Segmented US images provide a priori spatial information for fluorescence reconstruction using region-based, diffuse FT. The method was tested in simulations, tissue homogeneous and inclusion phantoms, and an injected-inclusion animal model. Reconstructed fluorescence yield was linear with PpIX concentration, including the lowest concentration used, 0.025 µg/ml. White light spectroscopy informed optical properties, which improved fluorescence reconstruction accuracy compared to the use of fixed, literature-based optical properties, reduced reconstruction error and reconstructed fluorescence standard deviation by factors of 8.9 and 2.0, respectively. Recovered contrast-to-background error was 25% and 74% for inclusion phantoms without and with a 2-mm skin-like layer, respectively. Preliminary mouse-model imaging demonstrated system feasibility for subsurface fluorescence measurement in vivo. These data suggest that this implementation of USFT is capable of regional PpIX mapping in human skin tumors during photodynamic therapy, to be used in dosimetric evaluations.


Asunto(s)
Imagen Óptica/métodos , Protoporfirinas/química , Tomografía/métodos , Ultrasonografía Intervencional/métodos , Animales , Diseño de Equipo , Ratones , Ratones Desnudos , Modelos Teóricos , Imagen Óptica/instrumentación , Fantasmas de Imagen , Protoporfirinas/análisis , Tomografía/instrumentación
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