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Automated multimodal spectral histopathology for quantitative diagnosis of residual tumour during basal cell carcinoma surgery

Boitor, Radu; Kong, Kenny; Shipp, Dustin; Varma, Sandeep; Koloydenko, Alexey; Kusum, Kulkarni; Elsheikh, Somaia; Bakker Schut, Tom; Caspers, Peter; Puppels, Gerwin; Wolf, Martin van der; Sokolova, Elena; Nijsten, T.E.C.; Salence, Brogan; Williams, Hywel C.; Ioan, Notingher

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Authors

Radu Boitor

Kenny Kong

Dustin Shipp

Sandeep Varma

Alexey Koloydenko

Kulkarni Kusum

Somaia Elsheikh

Tom Bakker Schut

Peter Caspers

Gerwin Puppels

Martin van der Wolf

Elena Sokolova

T.E.C. Nijsten

Brogan Salence

Profile image of HYWEL WILLIAMS

HYWEL WILLIAMS HYWEL.WILLIAMS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Dermato-Epidemiology



Abstract

Multimodal spectral histopathology (MSH), an optical technique combining tissue auto-fluorescence (AF) imaging and Raman micro-spectroscopy (RMS), was previously proposed for detection of residual basal cell carcinoma (BCC) at the surface of surgically-resected skin tissue. Here we report the development of a fully-automated prototype instrument based on MSH designed to be used in the clinic and operated by a non-specialist spectroscopy user. The algorithms for the AF image processing and Raman spectroscopy classification had been first optimised on a manually-operated laboratory instrument and then validated on the automated prototype using skin samples from independent patients. We present results on a range of skin samples excised during Mohs micrographic surgery, and demonstrate consistent diagnosis obtained in repeat test measurement, in agreement with the reference histopathology diagnosis. We also show that the prototype instrument can be operated by clinical users (a skin surgeon and a core medical trainee, after only 1-8 hours of training) to obtain consistent results in agreement with histopathology. The development of the new automated prototype and demonstration of inter-instrument transferability of the diagnosis models are important steps on the clinical translation path: it allows the testing of the MSH technology in a relevant clinical environment in order to evaluate its performance on a sufficiently large number of patients.

Citation

Boitor, R., Kong, K., Shipp, D., Varma, S., Koloydenko, A., Kusum, K., …Ioan, N. (in press). Automated multimodal spectral histopathology for quantitative diagnosis of residual tumour during basal cell carcinoma surgery. Biomedical Optics Express, 8(12), https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.8.005749

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 13, 2017
Online Publication Date Nov 22, 2017
Deposit Date Nov 16, 2017
Publicly Available Date Nov 22, 2017
Journal Biomedical Optics Express
Electronic ISSN 2156-7085
Publisher Optical Society of America
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 8
Issue 12
DOI https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.8.005749
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/896140
Publisher URL https://www.osapublishing.org/boe/abstract.cfm?uri=boe-8-12-5749
Contract Date Nov 16, 2017

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