Login / Signup

Combined near infrared photoacoustic imaging and ultrasound detects vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque.

Martin Karl SchneiderJames WangAris KareShaunak S AdkarDarren SalmiCaitlin F BellTom AlsaighDhananjay WaghJohn CollerAaron MayerSarah J SnyderAlexander D BorowskySteven R LongMaarten G LansbergGary K SteinbergJeremy J HeitNicholas J LeeperKatherine W Ferrara
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2023)
Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory process resulting in the deposition of cholesterol and cellular debris, narrowing of the vessel lumen and clot formation. Characterization of the morphology and vulnerability of the lesion is essential for effective clinical management. Photoacoustic imaging has sufficient penetration and sensitivity to map and characterize human atherosclerotic plaque. Here, near infrared photoacoustic imaging is shown to detect plaque components and, when combined with ultrasound imaging, to differentiate stable and vulnerable plaque. In an ex vivo study of photoacoustic imaging of excised plaque from 25 patients, 88.2% sensitivity and 71.4% specificity were achieved using a clinically-relevant protocol. In order to determine the origin of the near-infrared auto-photoacoustic (NIRAPA) signal, immunohistochemistry, spatial transcriptomics and proteomics were applied to adjacent sections of the plaque. The highest NIRAPA signal was spatially correlated with bilirubin and associated blood-based residue and inflammatory macrophages bearing CD74, HLA-DR, CD14 and CD163 markers. In summary, we establish the potential to apply the NIRAPA-ultrasound imaging combination to detect vulnerable carotid plaque.
Keyphrases