z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
OCT-elastography-based optical biopsy for breast cancer delineation and express assessment of morphological/molecular subtypes
Author(s) -
Ekaterina V. Gubarkova,
Alexander A. Sovetsky,
Vladimir Yu. Zaitsev,
Alexander L. Matveyev,
Dmitry А. Vorontsov,
Marina A. Sirotkina,
Lev A. Matveev,
Anton A. Plekhanov,
Nadezhda P. Pavlova,
S. А. Kuznetsov,
А. Yu. Vorontsov,
Elena V. Zagaynova,
Natalia D. Gladkova
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biomedical optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.362
H-Index - 86
ISSN - 2156-7085
DOI - 10.1364/boe.10.002244
Subject(s) - elastography , stiffness , breast cancer , biopsy , pathology , breast tumor , biomedical engineering , medicine , cancer , materials science , ultrasound , radiology , composite material
Application of compressional optical coherence elastography (OCE) for delineation of tumor and peri-tumoral tissue with simultaneous assessment of morphological/molecular subtypes of breast cancer is reported. The approach is based on the ability of OCE to quantitatively visualize stiffness of studied samples and then to perform a kind of OCE-based biopsy by analyzing elastographic B-scans that have sizes ~several millimeters similarly to bioptates used for "gold-standard" histological examinations. The method relies on identification of several main tissue constituents differing in their stiffness in the OCE scans. Initially the specific stiffness ranges for the analyzed tissue components (adipose tissue, fibrous and hyalinized tumor stroma, lymphocytic infiltrate and agglomerates of tumor cells) are determined via comparison of OCE and morphological/molecular data. Then assessment of non-tumor/tumor regions and tumor subtypes is made based on percentage of pixels with different characteristic stiffness ("stiffness spectrum") in the OCE image, also taking into account spatial localization of different-stiffness regions. Examples of high contrast among benign (or non-invasive) and several subtypes of invasive breast tumors in terms of their stiffness spectra are given.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here