| Literature DB >> 33952675 |
Steven Blair1, Missael Garcia1, Tyler Davis1, Zhongmin Zhu1, Zuodong Liang1, Christian Konopka2,3, Kevin Kauffman4, Risto Colanceski5, Imran Ferati5, Borislav Kondov5, Sinisa Stojanoski6, Magdalena Bogdanovska Todorovska7, Natasha Toleska Dimitrovska5, Nexhat Jakupi5, Daniela Miladinova6, Gordana Petrusevska7, Goran Kondov5, Wawrzyniec Lawrence Dobrucki2,3,8, Shuming Nie1,2,9,10, Viktor Gruev11,3,8.
Abstract
Cancer affects one in three people worldwide. Surgery remains the primary curative option for localized cancers, but good prognoses require complete removal of primary tumors and timely recognition of metastases. To expand surgical capabilities and enhance patient outcomes, we developed a six-channel color/near-infrared image sensor inspired by the mantis shrimp visual system that enabled near-infrared fluorescence image guidance during surgery. The mantis shrimp's unique eye, which maximizes the number of photons contributing to and the amount of information contained in each glimpse of its surroundings, is recapitulated in our single-chip imaging system that integrates arrays of vertically stacked silicon photodetectors and pixelated spectral filters. To provide information about tumor location unavailable from a single instrument, we tuned three color channels to permit an intuitive perspective of the surgical procedure and three near-infrared channels to permit multifunctional imaging of optical probes highlighting cancerous tissue. In nude athymic mice bearing human prostate tumors, our image sensor enabled simultaneous detection of two tumor-targeted fluorophores, distinguishing diseased from healthy tissue in an estimated 92% of cases. It also permitted extraction of near-infrared structured illumination enabling the mapping of the three-dimensional topography of tumors and surgical sites to within 1.2-mm error. In the operating room, during surgical resection in 18 patients with breast cancer, our image sensor further enabled sentinel lymph node mapping using clinically approved near-infrared fluorophores. The flexibility and performance afforded by this simple and compact architecture highlights the benefits of biologically inspired sensors in image-guided surgery.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33952675 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaw7067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956