Literature DB >> 33568879

Task-based evaluation of fluorescent-guided cancer surgery as a means of identifying optimal imaging agent properties in the context of variability in tumor- and healthy-tissue physiology.

Kenneth M Tichauer1, Cheng Wang2, Xiaochun Xu3, Kimberley S Samkoe2,3.   

Abstract

Fluorescent molecular-guided surgery (FGS) is at a tipping point in terms of clinical approval and adoption in a number cancer applications, with ongoing phase 0 and phase 1 clinical trials being carried out in a wide range of cancers using a wide range of agents. The pharmacokinetics of each of these agents and the physiology of these cancers can differ vastly on a patient-to-patient basis, bringing to question: how can one fairly compare different methodologies (defined as the combination of imaging agent, system, and protocol) and how can existing methodologies be further optimized? To this point, little methodology comparison has been carried out, and the majority of FGS optimization has concerned system development-on the level of maximizing signal-to-noise, dynamic detection range, and sensitivity-independently from traditional agent development-in terms of fluorophore brightness, toxicity, solubility, and binding affinity and specificity. Here we propose an inclusion of tumor and healthy tissue physiology (blood flow, vascular permeability, specific and nonspecific binding sites, extracellular matrix, interstitial pressure, etc…) variability into the optimization process and re-establish well-described task-based metrics for methodology optimization and comparing quality of one methodology to another. Two salient conclusions were identified: (1) contrast-to-background variability is a simple metric that correlates with difficult-to-carry-out task-based metrics for comparing methodologies, and (2) paired-agent imaging protocols offer unique advantages over single-imaging-agent studies for mitigating confounding tumor and background physiology variability.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fluorescence guided surgery; Paired-agent imaging; compartment modeling; contrast-to-variance ratio; sensitivity; specificity; tumor-to-background ratio

Year:  2020        PMID: 33568879      PMCID: PMC7872148          DOI: 10.1117/12.2546700

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng        ISSN: 0277-786X


  10 in total

1.  Dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging kinetic parameters and molecular weight of dendritic contrast agents in tumor angiogenesis in mice.

Authors:  Quido G de Lussanet; Sander Langereis; Regina G H Beets-Tan; Marcel H P van Genderen; Arjan W Griffioen; Jos M A van Engelshoven; Walter H Backes
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2005-02-24       Impact factor: 11.105

2.  Improved tumor contrast achieved by single time point dual-reporter fluorescence imaging.

Authors:  Kenneth M Tichauer; Kimberley S Samkoe; Kristian J Sexton; Jason R Gunn; Tayyaba Hasan; Brian W Pogue
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 3.170

3.  Fluorescence Lifetime-Based Tumor Contrast Enhancement Using an EGFR Antibody-Labeled Near-Infrared Fluorophore.

Authors:  Rahul Pal; Homan Kang; Hak Soo Choi; Anand T N Kumar
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2019-09-03       Impact factor: 12.531

4.  Advantages of a dual-tracer model over reference tissue models for binding potential measurement in tumors.

Authors:  K M Tichauer; K S Samkoe; W S Klubben; T Hasan; B W Pogue
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2012-10-01       Impact factor: 3.609

5.  Feature engineering applied to intraoperative in vivo Raman spectroscopy sheds light on molecular processes in brain cancer: a retrospective study of 65 patients.

Authors:  Émile Lemoine; Frédérick Dallaire; Rajeev Yadav; Rajeev Agarwal; Samuel Kadoury; Dominique Trudel; Marie-Christine Guiot; Kevin Petrecca; Frédéric Leblond
Journal:  Analyst       Date:  2019-11-04       Impact factor: 4.616

6.  Quantification of in vivo fluorescence decoupled from the effects of tissue optical properties using fiber-optic spectroscopy measurements.

Authors:  Anthony Kim; Mamta Khurana; Yumi Moriyama; Brian C Wilson
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2010 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.170

Review 7.  Quantitative in vivo cell-surface receptor imaging in oncology: kinetic modeling and paired-agent principles from nuclear medicine and optical imaging.

Authors:  Kenneth M Tichauer; Yu Wang; Brian W Pogue; Jonathan T C Liu
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2015-07-02       Impact factor: 3.609

8.  Toxicity and Pharmacokinetic Profile for Single-Dose Injection of ABY-029: a Fluorescent Anti-EGFR Synthetic Affibody Molecule for Human Use.

Authors:  Kimberley S Samkoe; Jason R Gunn; Kayla Marra; Sally M Hull; Karen L Moodie; Joachim Feldwisch; Theresa V Strong; Daniel R Draney; P Jack Hoopes; David W Roberts; Keith Paulsen; Brian W Pogue
Journal:  Mol Imaging Biol       Date:  2017-08       Impact factor: 3.488

9.  Highly Accurate Detection of Cancer In Situ with Intraoperative, Label-Free, Multimodal Optical Spectroscopy.

Authors:  Michael Jermyn; Jeanne Mercier; Kelly Aubertin; Joannie Desroches; Kirk Urmey; Jason Karamchandiani; Eric Marple; Marie-Christine Guiot; Frederic Leblond; Kevin Petrecca
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2017-06-28       Impact factor: 12.701

10.  Fluorescent affibody peptide penetration in glioma margin is superior to full antibody.

Authors:  Kristian Sexton; Kenneth Tichauer; Kimberley S Samkoe; Jason Gunn; P Jack Hoopes; Brian W Pogue
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 3.240

  10 in total

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