Histopathology for Mohs micrographic surgery with photoacoustic remote sensing microscopy.
Benjamin R EcclestoneKevan L BellSaad AbbasiDeepak DinakaranMuba TaherJohn R MackeyParsin Haji RezaPublished in: Biomedical optics express (2020)
Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) is a precise oncological technique where layers of tissue are resected and examined with intraoperative histopathology to minimize the removal of normal tissue while completely excising the cancer. To achieve intraoperative pathology, the tissue is frozen, sectioned and stained over a 20- to 60-minute period, then analyzed by the MMS surgeon. Surgery is continued one layer at a time until no cancerous cells remain, meaning MMS can take several hours to complete. Ideally, it would be desirable to circumvent or augment frozen sectioning methods and directly visualize subcellular morphology on the unprocessed excised tissues. Employing photoacoustic remote sensing (PARS) microscopy, we present a non-contact label-free reflection-mode method of performing such visualizations in frozen sections of human skin. PARS leverages endogenous optical absorption contrast within cell nuclei to provide visualizations reminiscent of histochemical staining techniques. Presented here, is the first true one to one comparison between PARS microscopy and standard histopathological imaging in human tissues. We demonstrate the ability of PARS microscopy to provide large grossing scans (>1 cm2, sufficient to visualize entire MMS sections) and regional scans with subcellular lateral resolution (300 nm).
Keyphrases
- label free
- high resolution
- minimally invasive
- single molecule
- high speed
- coronary artery bypass
- basal cell carcinoma
- optical coherence tomography
- high throughput
- computed tomography
- robot assisted
- surgical site infection
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- patients undergoing
- prostate cancer
- fluorescence imaging
- magnetic resonance
- stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- squamous cell carcinoma
- photodynamic therapy
- coronary artery disease
- signaling pathway
- cell therapy
- lymph node
- magnetic resonance imaging
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- rectal cancer
- cell proliferation
- acute coronary syndrome
- cell cycle arrest
- lymph node metastasis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- flow cytometry
- young adults
- pi k akt
- cell death
- solar cells