Optical Signatures Derived From Deep UV to NIR Excitation Discriminates Healthy Samples From Low and High Grades Glioma.
Hussein MehidineAudrey ChalumeauFanny PoulonFrédéric JammePascale VarletBertrand DevauxMatthieu RéfrégiersDarine Abi HaidarPublished in: Scientific reports (2019)
Among all the tumors of the central nervous system (CNS), glioma are the most deadly and the most malignant. Surgical resection is the standard therapeutic method to treat this type of brain cancer. But the diffusive character of these tumors create many problems for surgeons during the operation. In fact, these tumors migrate outside the tumor solid zone and invade the surrounding healthy tissues. These infiltrative tissues have the same visual appearance as healthy tissues, making it very difficult for surgeons to distinguish the healthy ones from the diffused ones. The surgeon, therefore, cannot properly remove the tumor margins increasing the recurrence risk of the tumor. To resolve this problem, our team has developed a multimodal two-photon fibered endomicroscope, compatible with the surgeon trocar, to better delimitate tumor boundaries by relying on the endogenous fluorescence of brain tissues. In this context, and in order to characterize the optical signature of glioma tumors, this study offers multimodal and multi-scaled optical measurements from healthy tissues to high grade glioma. We can interrogate tissue from deep ultra-violet to near infrared excitation by working with spectroscopy, fluorescence lifetime imaging, two-photon fluorescene imaging and Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) imaging. Optically derived ratios such as the Tryptophan/Collagen ratio, the optical redox ratio and the long lifetime intensity fraction, discriminated diseased tissue from its normal counterparts when fitted by Gaussian ellipsoids and choosing a threshold for each. Additionally two-photon fluorescence and SHG images were shown to display similar histological features as Hematoxylin-Eosin stained images.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- gene expression
- single molecule
- high grade
- energy transfer
- high speed
- deep learning
- living cells
- quality improvement
- white matter
- mass spectrometry
- squamous cell carcinoma
- pain management
- optical coherence tomography
- photodynamic therapy
- papillary thyroid
- mental health
- palliative care
- high intensity
- genome wide
- drug delivery
- multiple sclerosis
- resting state
- machine learning
- cerebrospinal fluid
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebral ischemia
- fluorescent probe
- brain injury
- monte carlo
- drug release
- chronic pain
- tissue engineering