Fully Integrated Ultra-thin Intraoperative Micro-imager for Cancer Detection Using Upconverting Nanoparticles
Autor: | Hossein Najafiaghdam, Cassio C. S. Pedroso, Nicole A. Torquato, Bruce E. Cohen, Mekhail Anwar |
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Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
Diagnostic Imaging
Male Urologic Diseases Cancer Research Physiology Prostate Cancer Clinical Sciences Prostatic Neoplasms Bioengineering Upconverting nanoparticle Mice Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging Intraoperative microscopy Oncology Clinical Research Time-resolved imaging Animals Humans Nanoparticles Nanotechnology Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Silicon imager Cancer |
Zdroj: | Molecular imaging and biology, vol 25, iss 1 |
ISSN: | 1860-2002 1536-1632 |
Popis: | Purpose Intraoperative detection and removal of microscopic residual disease (MRD) remain critical to the outcome of cancer surgeries. Today’s minimally invasive surgical procedures require miniaturization and surgical integration of highly sensitive imagers to seamlessly integrate into the modern clinical workflow. However, current intraoperative imagers remain cumbersome and still heavily dependent on large lenses and rigid filters, precluding further miniaturization and integration into surgical tools. Procedures We have successfully engineered a chip-scale intraoperative micro-imager array—without optical filters or lenses—integrated with lanthanide-based alloyed upconverting nanoparticles (aUCNPs) to achieve tissue imaging using a single micro-chip. This imaging platform is able to leverage the unique optical properties of aUCNPs (long luminescent lifetime, high-efficiency upconversion, no photobleaching) by utilizing a time-resolved imaging method to acquire images using a 36-by-80-pixel, 2.3 mm $$\times$$ × 4.8 mm silicon-based electronic imager micro-chip, that is, less than 100-µm thin. Each pixel incorporates a novel architecture enabling automated background measurement and cancellation. We have validated the performance, spatial resolution, and the background cancellation scheme of the imaging platform, using resolution test targets and mouse prostate tumor sample intratumorally injected with aUCNPs. To demonstrate the ability to image MRD, or tumor margins, we evaluated the imaging platform in visualizing a single-cell thin section of the injected prostate tumor sample. Results Tested on USAF resolution targets, the imager is able to achieve a resolution of 71 µm. We have also demonstrated successful background cancellation, achieving a signal-to-background ratio of 8 when performing ex vivo imaging on aUCNP-injected prostate tumor sample, improved from originally 0.4. The performance of the imaging platform on single-cell layer sections was also evaluated and the sensor achieved a signal-to-background ratio of 4.3 in resolving cell clusters with sizes as low as 200 cells. Conclusion The imaging system proposed here is a scalable chip-scale ultra-thin alternative for bulky conventional intraoperative imagers. Its novel pixel architecture and background correction scheme enable visualization of microscopic-scale residual disease while remaining completely free of lenses and filters, achieving an ultra-miniaturized form factor—critical for intraoperative settings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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