Pressure-enhanced sensing of tissue oxygenation via endogenous porphyrin: Implications for dynamic visualization of cancer in surgery.
Arthur F PetusseauMarien I OchoaMatthew ReedMarvin M DoyleyTayyaba HasanPetr BružaBrian W PoguePublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Fluorescence guidance is routinely used in surgery to enhance perfusion contrast in multiple types of diseases. Pressure-enhanced sensing of tissue oxygenation (PRESTO) via fluorescence is a technique extensively analyzed here, that uses an FDA-approved human precursor molecule, 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), to stimulate a unique delayed fluorescence signal that is representative of tissue hypoxia. The ALA precontrast agent is metabolized in most tissues into a red fluorescent molecule, protoporphyrin IX (PpIX), which has both prompt fluorescence, indicative of the concentration, and a delayed fluorescence, that is amplified in low tissue oxygen situations. Applied pressure from palpation induces transient capillary stasis and a resulting transient PRESTO contrast, dominant when there is near hypoxia. This study examined the kinetics and behavior of this effect in both normal and tumor tissues, with a prolonged high PRESTO contrast (contrast to background of 7.3) across 5 tumor models, due to sluggish capillaries and inhibited vasodynamics. This tissue function imaging approach is a fundamentally unique tool for real-time palpation-induced tissue response in vivo, relevant for chronic hypoxia, such as vascular diseases or oncologic surgery.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- endothelial cells
- single molecule
- magnetic resonance
- energy transfer
- coronary artery bypass
- gene expression
- photodynamic therapy
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- prostate cancer
- high glucose
- squamous cell carcinoma
- coronary artery disease
- drug induced
- computed tomography
- oxidative stress
- mass spectrometry
- atrial fibrillation
- quantum dots
- blood flow
- brain injury
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- robot assisted
- surgical site infection
- rectal cancer
- papillary thyroid
- cross sectional
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- living cells
- cerebral ischemia