| Literature DB >> 23029196 |
Mohammad Reza Hajihashemi1, Stephen R Grobmyer, Samer Z Al-Quran, Huabei Jiang.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer and the main cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide. There are limitations associated with the existing clinical tools for breast cancer detection and alternative modalities for early detection and classification of breast cancer are urgently needed. Here we describe an optical imaging technique, called multispectral diffuse optical tomography (DOT), and demonstrate its ability of non-invasively evaluating nuclear morphometry for differentiating benign from malignant lesions. Photon densities along the surface of the breast were measured to allow for the extraction of three statistical parameters including the size, elongation and density of nuclei inside the breast tissue. The results from 14 patients (4 malignant and 10 benign lesions) show that there exist significant contrasts between the diseased and surrounding normal nuclei and that the recovered nuclear morphological parameters agree well the pathological findings. We found that the nuclei of cancer cells were less-spherical compared with those of surrounding normal cells, while the nuclear density or volume fraction provided the highest contrast among the three statistical parameters recovered. This pilot study demonstrates the potential of multispectral DOT as a cellular imaging method for accurate determination of breast cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23029196 PMCID: PMC3446909 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the multispectral DOT system. (b). Photograph of the breast/fiber optic array.
Figure 2(a). A schematic model for nuclei inside the breast tissue. (b). Averaged reduced scattering coefficient (over all wavelengths). (c) A microscopic image from the tumor region for patient G8. Cancer region and nuclei are circumscribed by dashed lines to aid visualization.
Figure 3Averaged values of the retrieved parameters along with those estimated from microscope observation of tumor tissue.
Figure 4Average values of the three recovered parameters from all patients with malignant or benign lesions and their surrounding normal tissues.
(a) mean diameter versus volume fraction. (b) mean diameter versus aspect ratio.(c)volume fraction versus aspect ratio.
The nuclear morphology parameters, reported by several researchers.
| Reference | Mean particle size (µm) | Volume fraction | Aspect ratio | Tissue type |
| El Sharkawy et al, | 8.4 | – | – | Malignant |
| El Sharkawy et al | 5.7 | – | – | Healthy |
| M. Deacu et al | 8.6–12.2 | – | 0.69 | Malignant |
| M. Deacu et al | 4.7–6.4 | – | 0.71 | Healthy |
| Kalhan et al | 5.77 | – | 0.71 | Benign |
| Kalhan et al | 6.2–11.2 | – | 0.68 | Malignant |
| E. Artacho-Pérula | – | 20%–30% | – | Malignant |
| S. Suhane et al | – | 10% | – | Healthy |
| S. Suhane et al | – | 20%–40% | – | Malignant, Benign |