Noninvasive Probe Characterizes Skin Cancers Morphologically and Biochemically

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 05 Jan 2012
A joint US-Dutch team has developed a noninvasive probe capable of both morphological and biochemical characterization of skin cancers.

The portable instrument combines a Raman spectroscopy (RS) system with an optical coherence tomography (OCT) device and enables the sequential acquisition of coregistered OCT and RS data sets. An Andor (Belfast, Northern Ireland) high-resolution, near-infrared-enhanced Newton camera was chosen as the core element of the Raman diagnosis module.

The probe was developed under the direction of Anita Mahadevan-Jansen from Vanderbilt University (Nashville, TN, USA). It screens large areas of skin up to 15 mm wide to a depth of 2.4 mm with OCT to visualize microstructural irregularities and perform an initial morphological analysis of lesions. The OCT images are then used to identify locations to acquire biochemically specific Raman spectra.

"Having demonstrated the clinical potential of the RS-OCT instrument to rapidly screen at risk patients, we are continuing to develop the dual-modal technique for other applications where noninvasive assessment of both microstructure and biochemical composition are critical to accurate assessment of pathology," said Chetan Patil from Vanderbilt University.

Skin cancer is the most common form of human cancer with annual rates continuing to climb from their current estimate of just over three million new cases each year. Although all skin cancers share the likelihood of a favorable outcome if early diagnosis and complete resection are achieved, diagnosis is invasive, subjective, lengthy, and expensive, involving expert visual inspection, biopsy, and histopathology.

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