AI Article Synopsis

  • Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a new imaging technique that can visualize tissue structures and was used to assess early changes in bronchial epithelium during the study.
  • In the study, 138 heavy smokers and 10 lung cancer patients underwent OCT imaging and biopsies to correlate abnormal findings with histopathology, resulting in various classifications of tissue changes from normal to invasive carcinoma.
  • The findings suggest that OCT combined with autofluorescence bronchoscopy is a promising approach for noninvasively studying bronchial lesions, potentially aiding in the monitoring of their progression and the impact of treatment.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an optical imaging method that can visualize cellular and extracellular structures at and below tissue surface. The objective of the study was to determine if OCT could characterize preneoplastic changes in the bronchial epithelium identified by autofluorescence bronchoscopy.

Experimental Design: A 1.5-mm fiberoptic probe was inserted via a bronchoscope into the airways of 138 volunteer heavy smokers participating in a chemoprevention trial and 10 patients with lung cancer to evaluate areas that were found to be normal or abnormal on autofluorescence bronchoscopy. Radial scanning of the airways was done to generate OCT images in real time. Following OCT imaging, the same sites were biopsied for pathologic correlation.

Results: A total of 281 OCT images and the corresponding bronchial biopsies were obtained. The histopathology of these areas includes 145 normal/hyperplasia, 61 metaplasia, 39 mild dysplasia, 10 moderate dysplasia, 6 severe dysplasia, 7 carcinoma in situ, and 13 invasive carcinomas. Quantitative measurement of the epithelial thickness showed that invasive carcinoma was significantly different than carcinoma in situ (P=0.004) and dysplasia was significantly different than metaplasia or hyperplasia (P=0.002). In addition, nuclei of the cells corresponding to histologic results became more discernible in lesions that were moderate dysplasia or worse compared with lower-grade lesions.

Conclusion: Preliminary data suggest that autofluorescence bronchoscopy-guided OCT imaging of bronchial lesions is technically feasible. OCT may be a promising nonbiopsy tool for in vivo imaging of preneoplastic bronchial lesions to study their natural history and the effect of chemopreventive intervention.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2849640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-07-4418DOI Listing

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