| Literature DB >> 31334117 |
Linpeng Wei1, Yoko Fujita2, Nader Sanai2, Jonathan T C Liu1,3.
Abstract
Low-power fluorescence microscopy of 5-ALA-induced PpIX has emerged as a valuable intraoperative imaging technology for improving the resection of malignant gliomas. However, current fluorescence imaging tools are not highly sensitive nor quantitative, which limits their effectiveness for optimizing operative decisions near the surgical margins of gliomas, in particular non-enhancing low-grade gliomas. Intraoperative high-resolution optical-sectioning microscopy can potentially serve as a valuable complement to low-power fluorescence microscopy by providing reproducible quantification of tumor parameters at the infiltrative margins of diffuse gliomas. In this forward-looking perspective article, we provide a brief discussion of recent technical advancements, pilot clinical studies, and our vision of the future adoption of handheld optical-sectioning microscopy at the final stages of glioma surgeries to enhance the extent of resection. We list a number of challenges for clinical acceptance, as well as potential strategies to overcome such obstacles for the surgical implementation of these in vivo microscopy techniques.Entities:
Keywords: 5-ALA; PpIX; fluorescence-guided surgery; gliomas; handheld microscopy; quantitative imaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31334117 PMCID: PMC6616084 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Comparison of routine and emerging imaging techniques for neurosurgical guidance. (A) In the current standard-of-care, pre-operative MRI is used to assess the location and size of the bulk tumor, and wide-field surgical microscopy is used intraoperatively to guide debulking. Neither method provides sufficient spatial resolution or sensitivity to effectively visualize diffuse tumors at the surgical margins. Handheld optical-sectioning microscopy is an intraoperative imaging technique that provides superior resolution and sensitivity to detect infiltrating tumor cells at the margins, and can be potentially used to quantify tumor parameters at localized regions at the final stages of resection. (B) The colored boxes indicate the relative field-of-view (FOV) of the imaging modalities described. Larger FOVs are advantageous to mitigate sampling errors when imaging heterogeneous tissues, but typically require trade-offs in terms of resolution and sensitivity. Green: MRI. Blue: wide-field microscopy. Orange: optical-sectioning microscopy with mosaicking.
Figure 2Proposed clinical workflow of 5-ALA-based fluorescence-guided neurosurgery. (A) Conventional low-power fluorescence surgical microscopy provides a wide FOV that often covers the entire surgical cavity. (B) Macroscopic PpIX fluorescence is visible at the central portions of most HGGs, but not at the infiltrative margins. (C) Example low-power fluorescence microscopy image of PpIX expression from a bulk HGG region. The margins of the tumor are subjectively delineated and ambiguous. (D) Debulking guided by macroscopic PpIX fluorescence, resulting in residual tumor burden. (E) High-sensitivity probe-based optical-sectioning microscopy is used to examine localized regions near the surgical margins, providing a non-invasive alternative to intraoperative frozen section histopathology. (F) Visualization of subcellular PpIX fluorescence can potentially enable quantification of tumor parameters in order to guide surgical decisions at the final stages of resection. (G) Example image of microscopic PpIX fluorescence in a HGG biopsy using high-resolution optical-sectioning microscopy. (H) Optimal extent of resection is achieved after iterative tumor resection guided by video-mosaicked handheld optical-sectioning microscopy.