Performance metrics of an optical spectral imaging system for intra-operative assessment of breast tumor margins.


Autoria(s): Bydlon, TM; Kennedy, SA; Richards, LM; Brown, JQ; Yu, B; Junker, MK; Gallagher, J; Geradts, J; Wilke, LG; Ramanujam, N
Data(s)

12/04/2010

Formato

8058 - 8076

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20588651

197019

Opt Express, 2010, 18 (8), pp. 8058 - 8076

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4237

1094-4087

Idioma(s)

ENG

en_US

Relação

Opt Express

Optics Express

Optics Express

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

As many as 20-70% of patients undergoing breast conserving surgery require repeat surgeries due to a close or positive surgical margin diagnosed post-operatively [1]. Currently there are no widely accepted tools for intra-operative margin assessment which is a significant unmet clinical need. Our group has developed a first-generation optical visible spectral imaging platform to image the molecular composition of breast tumor margins and has tested it clinically in 48 patients in a previously published study [2]. The goal of this paper is to report on the performance metrics of the system and compare it to clinical criteria for intra-operative tumor margin assessment. The system was found to have an average signal to noise ratio (SNR) >100 and <15% error in the extraction of optical properties indicating that there is sufficient SNR to leverage the differences in optical properties between negative and close/positive margins. The probe had a sensing depth of 0.5-2.2 mm over the wavelength range of 450-600 nm which is consistent with the pathologic criterion for clear margins of 0-2 mm. There was <1% cross-talk between adjacent channels of the multi-channel probe which shows that multiple sites can be measured simultaneously with negligible cross-talk between adjacent sites. Lastly, the system and measurement procedure were found to be reproducible when evaluated with repeated measures, with a low coefficient of variation (<0.11). The only aspect of the system not optimized for intra-operative use was the imaging time. The manuscript includes a discussion of how the speed of the system can be improved to work within the time constraints of an intra-operative setting.

Palavras-Chave #Breast Neoplasms #Computer Simulation #Diagnostic Imaging #Female #Humans #Intraoperative Care #Monte Carlo Method #Optical Devices #Phantoms, Imaging #Reproducibility of Results #Spectrum Analysis