| Literature DB >> 33057037 |
Benjamin R Ecclestone1, Kevan Bell1,2, Saad Abbasi1, Deepak Dinakaran2,3, Frank K H van Landeghem4, John R Mackey2,3, Paul Fieguth5, Parsin Haji Reza6.
Abstract
Malignant brain tumors are among the deadliest neoplasms with the lowest survival rates of any cancer type. In considering surgical tumor resection, suboptimal extent of resection is linked to poor clinical outcomes and lower overall survival rates. Currently available tools for intraoperative histopathological assessment require an average of 20 min processing and are of limited diagnostic quality for guiding surgeries. Consequently, there is an unaddressed need for a rapid imaging technique to guide maximal resection of brain tumors. Working towards this goal, presented here is an all optical non-contact label-free reflection mode photoacoustic remote sensing (PARS) microscope. By using a tunable excitation laser, PARS takes advantage of the endogenous optical absorption peaks of DNA and cytoplasm to achieve virtual contrast analogous to standard hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. In conjunction, a fast 266 nm excitation is used to generate large grossing scans and rapidly assess small fields in real-time with hematoxylin-like contrast. Images obtained using this technique show comparable quality and contrast to the current standard for histopathological assessment of brain tissues. Using the proposed method, rapid, high-throughput, histological-like imaging was achieved in unstained brain tissues, indicating PARS' utility for intraoperative guidance to improve extent of surgical resection.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33057037 PMCID: PMC7560683 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-74160-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Simplified Schematic of the PARS system. Component labels are defined as follows: polarizing beam splitter (PBS), long-pass filter (LPF), quarter-wave plate (QWP), objective lens (OL), dichroic mirror (DM), fold mirror (m).
Figure 2PARS H&E images of unstained tissue in comparison to their standard histopathological preparations. The left column of images outlined in purple was taken with a brightfield microscope from an H&E stained slide requiring multiple steps of processing and staining (example shown at top of column). The right column outlined in orange, was taken with the PARS system from unstained tissue (example shown at the top of column) therefore eliminating the need for sample processing. (a) A conventional bright field H&E image of glioblastoma with solid tumor and microvascular proliferations (red outlines). (b) A rapid acquisition PARS image of the adjacent unstained brain tissue sample, with the region of solid tumoral tissue, and microvascular proliferations (red outlines), as in (a). (c) A standard bright field histopathological H&E image of a glioblastoma sample with a largely necrotic region (blue lines and stars), a thrombotic vessel (purple outline), and a region of solid tumor with microvascular proliferations (red outline). (d) A PARS image acquired in a rapid acquisition mode of the same section of glioblastoma tissue, with the largely necrotic region (blue line and stars) and thrombotic vessel (purple outline), and the solid tumor region with microvascular proliferations (red outline), as in (c). A close-up of tumor cells and microvascular proliferations at the boundary between these regions is shown enclosed in the green boxes. (e) A standard bright field histopathological H&E image of a brain tissue sample with infiltrating tumor cells, adjacent to solid tumor shown in (a)–(d). (f) A PARS multiwavelength simulated H&E image of the same section of brain tissue.
Figure 3Standard brightfield histology, compared to PARS H&E. (a, c) Small field of view standard H&E processed white matter tissue with gliosis; perivascular oligodendrocytes are indicated by the black arrows. (b, d) High fidelity PARS emulated H&E images of adjacent tissue sections showing the same clusters of perivascular oligodendrocytes, marked with black arrows.