Trimodal system for in vivo skin cancer screening with combined optical coherence tomography-Raman and colocalized optoacoustic measurements.
Arthur VarkentinMikhail MazurenkaElias BlumenrötherLea BehrendtSteffen EmmertUwe MorgnerMerve Meinhardt-WollweberMaik RahlvesBernhard Wilhelm RothPublished in: Journal of biophotonics (2018)
A new multimodal system for rapid, noninvasive in vivo skin cancer screening is presented, combining optical coherence tomography (OCT) and optoacoustic (OA) modalities to provide precise tumor depth determination with a Raman spectroscopic modality capable of detecting the lesion type and, thus, providing diagnostic capability. Both OA and Raman setups use wide field skin illumination to ensure the compliance with maximum permissible exposure (MPE) requirements. The Raman signal is collected via the OCT scanning lens to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio of the measured signal while keeping radiation levels below MPE limits. OCT is used to optically determine the tumor thickness and for volumetric imaging whereas OA utilizes acoustic signals generated by optical absorption contrast for thickness determination at potentially higher penetration depths compared to OCT. Preliminary results of first clinical trials using our setup are presented. The measured lesion depth is in good agreement with histology results, while Raman measurements show distinctive differences between normal skin and melanocytic lesions, and, moreover, between different skin areas. In future, we will validate the setup presented for reliable detection of pathophysiological parameters, morphology and thickness of suspicious skin lesions.
Keyphrases
- optical coherence tomography
- skin cancer
- diabetic retinopathy
- label free
- soft tissue
- high resolution
- wound healing
- optic nerve
- clinical trial
- raman spectroscopy
- knee osteoarthritis
- magnetic resonance
- molecularly imprinted
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- air pollution
- radiation therapy
- solid phase extraction
- magnetic resonance imaging
- radiation induced
- chronic pain
- quantum dots
- phase ii