Compression OCT-elastography combined with speckle-contrast analysis as an approach to the morphological assessment of breast cancer tissue.
Anton A PlekhanovEkaterina V GubarkovaMarina A SirotkinaAlexander A SovetskyDmitry A VorontsovLev A MatveevSergey S KuznetsovAlexandra Y BogomolovaAlexey Y VorontsovAlexander L MatveyevSergey V GamayunovElena V ZagaynovaVladimir Y ZaitsevNatalia D GladkovaPublished in: Biomedical optics express (2023)
Currently, optical biopsy technologies are being developed for rapid and label-free visualization of biological tissue with micrometer-level resolution. They can play an important role in breast-conserving surgery guidance, detection of residual cancer cells, and targeted histological analysis. For solving these problems, compression optical coherence elastography (C-OCE) demonstrated impressive results based on differences in the elasticity of different tissue constituents. However, sometimes straightforward C-OCE-based differentiation is insufficient because of the similar stiffness of certain tissue components. We present a new automated approach to the rapid morphological assessment of human breast cancer based on the combined usage of C-OCE and speckle-contrast (SC) analysis. Using the SC analysis of structural OCT images, the threshold value of the SC coefficient was established to enable the separation of areas of adipose cells from necrotic cancer cells, even if they are highly similar in elastic properties. Consequently, the boundaries of the tumor bed can be reliably identified. The joint analysis of structural and elastographic images enables automated morphological segmentation based on the characteristic ranges of stiffness (Young's modulus) and SC coefficient established for four morphological structures of breast-cancer samples from patients post neoadjuvant chemotherapy (residual cancer cells, cancer stroma, necrotic cancer cells, and mammary adipose cells). This enabled precise automated detection of residual cancer-cell zones within the tumor bed for grading cancer response to chemotherapy. The results of C-OCE/SC morphometry highly correlated with the histology-based results (r =0.96-0.98). The combined C-OCE/SC approach has the potential to be used intraoperatively for achieving clean resection margins in breast cancer surgery and for performing targeted histological analysis of samples, including the evaluation of the efficacy of cancer chemotherapy.
Keyphrases
- deep learning
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- label free
- papillary thyroid
- locally advanced
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- optical coherence tomography
- high resolution
- machine learning
- convolutional neural network
- squamous cell
- minimally invasive
- childhood cancer
- magnetic resonance
- high throughput
- endothelial cells
- ejection fraction
- induced apoptosis
- insulin resistance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- coronary artery bypass
- diffusion weighted imaging
- sentinel lymph node
- cancer therapy
- cell proliferation
- lymph node
- adipose tissue
- cell cycle arrest
- oxidative stress
- metabolic syndrome
- high speed
- early stage
- pluripotent stem cells
- computed tomography
- type diabetes
- drug delivery
- atrial fibrillation
- sensitive detection
- real time pcr
- contrast enhanced
- skeletal muscle
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- chronic kidney disease