Significance: Selecting a nerve-specific lead fluorescent agent for translation in fluorescence-guided surgery is time-consuming and expensive. Preclinical fluorescent agent studies rely primarily on animal models, which are a critical component of preclinical testing, but these models may not predict fluorophore performance in human tissues.
Aim: The primary aim of this study was to evaluate and compare two preclinical models to test tissue-specific fluorophores based on discarded human tissues.
Background/objectives: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) presents significant diagnostic and prognostic challenges, as current biomarkers frequently fail to accurately stage disease, predict rapid metastatic recurrence (rPDAC), or assess response to neoadjuvant therapy (NAT). We investigated the potential for circulating neoplastic-immune hybrid cells (CHCs) as a non-invasive, multifunctional biomarker for PDAC.
Methods: Peripheral blood specimens were obtained from patients diagnosed with PDAC.
Significance: Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) has the sixth highest incidence worldwide, with cases annually. Surgery is the primary treatment option for HNSCC, during which surgeons balance two main goals: (1) complete cancer resection and (2) preservation of normal tissues to ensure post-surgical quality of life. Unfortunately, these goals are not synergistic, where complete cancer resection is often limited by efforts to preserve normal tissues, particularly nerves, and reduce life-altering comorbidities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGuided surgery has demonstrated significant improvements in patient outcomes in some disease processes. Interest in this field has led to substantial growth in the technologies under investigation. Most likely no single technology will prove to be "best," and combinations of macro- and microscale guidance-using radiological imaging navigation, probes (activatable, perfusion, and molecular-targeted; large- and small-molecule), autofluorescence, tissue intrinsic optical properties, bioimpedance, and other characteristics-will offer patients and surgeons the greatest opportunity for high-success/low-morbidity medical interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Uveal melanoma is the most common non-cutaneous melanoma and is an intraocular malignancy affecting nearly 7,000 individuals per year worldwide. Of these, approximately 50% will progress to metastatic disease for which there are currently no effective curative therapies. Despite advances in molecular profiling and metastatic stratification of uveal melanoma tumors, little is known regarding their underlying biology of metastasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF: Small molecule drugs such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) targeting tumoral molecular dependencies have become standard of care for numerous cancer types. Notably, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) TKIs (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPersistently high, worldwide mortality from cancer highlights the unresolved challenges of disease surveillance and detection that impact survival. Development of a non-invasive, blood-based biomarker would transform survival from cancer. We demonstrate the functionality of ultra-high content analyses of a newly identified population of tumor cells that are hybrids between neoplastic and immune cells in patient matched tumor and peripheral blood specimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculating hybrid cells (CHCs) are a newly discovered, tumor-derived cell population found in the peripheral blood of cancer patients and are thought to contribute to tumor metastasis. However, identifying CHCs by immunofluorescence (IF) imaging of patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) is a time-consuming and subjective process that currently relies on manual annotation by laboratory technicians. Additionally, while IF is relatively easy to apply to tissue sections, its application to PBMC smears presents challenges due to the presence of biological and technical artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Uveal melanoma is the most common non-cutaneous melanoma and is an intraocular malignancy affecting nearly 7,000 individuals per year worldwide. Of these, approximately 50% will progress to metastatic disease for which there are currently no effective therapies. Despite advances in molecular profiling and metastatic stratification of uveal melanoma tumors, little is known regarding their underlying biology of metastasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUveal melanoma (UM) is the most common non-cutaneous melanoma and is an intraocular malignancy that affects nearly 7,000 individuals per year worldwide. Of these, nearly 50% will progress to metastatic disease for which there are currently no effective therapies. Despite advances in the molecular profiling and metastatic stratification of class 1 and 2 UM tumors, little is known regarding the underlying biology of UM metastasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculating hybrid cells (CHCs) are a newly discovered, tumor-derived cell population identified in the peripheral blood of cancer patients and are thought to contribute to tumor metastasis. However, identifying CHCs by immunofluorescence (IF) imaging of patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) is a time-consuming and subjective process that currently relies on manual annotation by laboratory technicians. Additionally, while IF is relatively easy to apply to tissue sections, its application on PBMC smears presents challenges due to the presence of biological and technical artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) is poised to revolutionize surgical medicine through near-infrared (NIR) fluorophores for tissue- and disease-specific contrast. Clinical open and laparoscopic FGS vision systems operate nearly exclusively at NIR wavelengths. However, tissue-specific NIR contrast agents compatible with clinically available imaging systems are lacking, leaving nerve tissue identification during prostatectomy a persistent challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathological diagnosis relies on morphological assessment of tissue using histological staining and molecular phenotyping through immunostaining that must be performed on separate tissue sections. Orion is a newly reported methodology that facilitates multiplexed immunostaining with histological staining on the same slide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Chem Biol
October 2023
Iatrogenic nerve injury represents one of the most feared surgical complications and remains a major morbidity across many surgical specialties. Currently, no clinically approved technique can directly enhance intraoperative nerve visualization, where intraoperative nerve identification continues to challenge even experienced surgeons. Fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) has been successfully integrated into clinical medicine to improve safety and efficacy in the surgical arena.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients undergoing gynecological procedures suffer from lasting side effects due to intraoperative nerve damage. Small, delicate nerves with complex and nonuniform branching patterns in the female pelvic neuroanatomy make nerve-sparing efforts during standard gynecological procedures such as hysterectomy, cystectomy, and colorectal cancer resection difficult, and thus many patients are left with incontinence and sexual dysfunction. Herein, a near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent nerve-specific contrast agent, LGW08-35, that is spectrally compatible with clinical fluorescence guided surgery (FGS) systems is formulated and characterized for rapid implementation for nerve-sparing gynecologic surgeries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Reliable and rapid identification of tumor in the margins of breast specimens during breast-conserving surgery to reduce repeat surgery rates is an active area of investigation. Dual-stain difference imaging (DDSI) is one of many approaches under evaluation for this application. This technique aims to topically apply fluorescent stain pairs (one targeted to a receptor-of-interest and the other a spectrally distinct isotype), image both stains, and compute a normalized difference image between the two channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSignificance: This third biennial intraoperative molecular imaging (IMI) conference shows how optical contrast agents have been applied to develop clinically significant endpoints that improve precision cancer surgery.
Aim: National and international experts on IMI presented ongoing clinical trials in cancer surgery and preclinical work. Previously known dyes (with broader applications), new dyes, novel nonfluorescence-based imaging techniques, pediatric dyes, and normal tissue dyes were discussed.
Significance: Positive margin status due to incomplete removal of tumor tissue during radical prostatectomy for high-risk localized prostate cancer requires reoperation or adjuvant therapy, which increases morbidity and mortality. Adverse effects of prostate cancer treatments commonly include erectile dysfunction, urinary incontinence, and bowel dysfunction, making successful initial curative prostatectomy imperative.
Aim: Current intraoperative tumor margin assessment is largely limited to frozen section analysis, which is a lengthy, labor-intensive process that is obtrusive to the clinical workflow within the operating room (OR).
Accelerating innovation in the space of fluorescence imaging for surgical applications has increased interest in safely and expediently advancing these technologies to clinic through Food and Drug Administration-(FDA-) compliant trials. Conventional metrics for early phase trials include drug safety, tolerability, dosing, and pharmacokinetics. Most procedural imaging technologies rely on administration of an exogenous fluorophore and concurrent use of an imaging system; both of which must receive FDA approval to proceed to clinic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have co-developed a first-in-kind model of fluorophore testing in freshly amputated human limbs. human tissue provides a unique opportunity for the testing of pre-clinical fluorescent agents, collection of imaging data, and histopathologic examination in human tissue prior to performing experiments. Existing pre-clinical fluorescent agent studies rely primarily on animal models, which do not directly predict fluorophore performance in humans and can result in wasted resources and time if an agent proves ineffective in early human trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNon-destructive fluorophore diffusion across cell membranes to provide an unbiased fluorescence intensity readout is critical for quantitative imaging applications in live cells and tissues. Commercially available small-molecule fluorophores have been engineered for biological compatibility, imparting high water solubility by modifying rhodamine and cyanine dye scaffolds with multiple sulfonate groups. The resulting net negative charge, however, often renders these fluorophores cell-membrane-impermeant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpatial profiling of tissues promises to elucidate tumor-microenvironment interactions and enable development of spatial biomarkers to predict patient response to immunotherapy and other therapeutics. However, spatial biomarker discovery is often carried out on a single patient cohort or imaging technology, limiting statistical power and increasing the likelihood of technical artifacts. In order to analyze multiple patient cohorts profiled on different platforms, we developed methods for comparative data analysis from three disparate multiplex imaging technologies: 1) cyclic immunofluorescence data we generated from 102 breast cancer patients with clinical follow-up, in addition to publicly available 2) imaging mass cytometry and 3) multiplex ion-beam imaging data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdvances in our understanding of the complex, multifaceted interactions between tumor epithelia, immune infiltrate, and tumor microenvironmental cells have been driven by highly multiplexed imaging technologies. These techniques are capable of labeling many more biomarkers than conventional immunostaining methods. However, multiplexed imaging techniques suffer from low detection sensitivity, cell loss-particularly in fragile samples-, and challenges with antibody labeling.
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