Design of a rectal probe for diffuse optical spectroscopy imaging for chemotherapy and radiotherapy monitoring

  • van de Giessen M
  • Santoro Y
  • Mirzaei Zarandi S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Diffuse optical spectroscopy imaging (DOSI) has shown great potential for the early detection of non-responding tumors during neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer, already one day after therapy starts. Patients with rectal cancer receive similar chemotherapy treatment. The rectum geometry and tissue properties of healthy and tumor tissue in the rectum and the requirement of surface contact impose constraints on the probe design. In this work we present the design of a DOSI probe with the aim of early chemotherapy/radiotherapy effectiveness detection in rectal tumors. We show using Monte Carlo simulations and phantom measurements that the colon tissue can be characterized reliably using a source-detector separation in the order of 10 mm. We present a design and rapid prototype of a probe for DOSI measurements that can be mounted on a standard laparoscope and that fits through a standard rectoscope. Using predominantly clinically approved components we aim at fast clinical translation. © 2014 SPIE.

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van de Giessen, M., Santoro, Y., Mirzaei Zarandi, S., Pigazzi, A., Cerussi, A. E., & Tromberg, B. J. (2014). Design of a rectal probe for diffuse optical spectroscopy imaging for chemotherapy and radiotherapy monitoring. In Endoscopic Microscopy IX; and Optical Techniques in Pulmonary Medicine (Vol. 8927, p. 89270G). SPIE. https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2035243

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