Longitudinal evaluation of patients with oral potentially malignant disorders using optical imaging and spectroscopy
2012
Dysplastic and cancerous alterations in oral tissue can be detected noninvasively in vivo using optical techniques
including autofluorescence imaging, high-resolution imaging, and spectroscopy. Interim results are presented from a
longitudinal study in which optical imaging and spectroscopy were used to evaluate the progression of lesions over time
in patients at high risk for development of oral cancer. Over 100 patients with oral potentially malignant disorders have
been enrolled in the study to date. Areas of concern in the oral cavity are measured using widefield autofluorescence
imaging and depth-sensitive optical spectroscopy during successive clinical visits. Autofluorescence intensity patterns
and autofluorescence spectra are tracked over time and correlated with clinical observations. Patients whose lesions
progress and who undergo surgery are also measured in the operating room immediately prior to surgery using
autofluorescence imaging and spectroscopy, with the addition of intraoperative high-resolution imaging to characterize
nuclear size, nuclear crowding, and tissue architecture at selected sites. Optical measurements are compared to
histopathology results from biopsies and surgical specimens collected from the measured sites. Autofluorescence
imaging and spectroscopy measurements are continued during post-surgery followup visits. We examined correlations
between clinical impression and optical classification over time with an average followup period of 4 months. The data
collected to date suggest that multimodal optical techniques may aid in noninvasive monitoring of the progression of oral
premalignant lesions, biopsy site selection, and accurate delineation of lesion extent during surgery.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
0
References
0
Citations
NaN
KQI