Quantitative subsurface spatial frequency-domain fluorescence imaging for enhanced glioma resection

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Abstract

The rate of complete resection of glioma has improved with the introduction of 5-aminolevulinic acid-induced protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) fluorescence image guidance. Surgical outcomes are further enhanced when the fluorescence signal is decoupled from the intrinsic tissue optical absorption and scattering obtained from diffuse reflectance measurements, yielding the absolute PpIX concentration, [PpIX]. Spatial frequency domain imaging was used previously to measure [PpIX] in near-surface tumors under blue fluorescence excitation. Here, we extend this to subsurface [PpIX] fluorescence under red-light excitation. The decay rate of the modulation amplitude of the fluorescence signal was used to calculate the PpIX depth, which was then applied in a forward diffusion model to estimate [PpIX] at depth. For brain-like optical properties in phantoms with PpIX fluorescent inclusions, the depth can be recovered up to depths of 9.5 mm ± 0.4 mm, with [PpIX] ranging from 5 to 15 μg/mL within an average deviation of 15% from the true [PpIX] value.

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Sibai, M., Wirth, D. J., Leblond, F., Roberts, D. W., Paulsen, K. D., & Wilson, B. C. (2019, May 1). Quantitative subsurface spatial frequency-domain fluorescence imaging for enhanced glioma resection. Journal of Biophotonics. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1002/jbio.201800271

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