The field of the invention is that of imaging of pigment disorders of the skin.
Dermatology faces growing demand for increasingly early treatment of cutaneous pathologies. For the issue of pigment disorders of the skin, statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO) show:
2 to 3 million carcinomas, 132 000 cases of melanoma worldwide in 2011,
a doubling of the number of cases every 10 years since 1945,
in 15 to 20% of cases, the melanoma develops from a mole,
15% chance of survival at 5 years if detected late,
95% chance of recovery if detected early.
To diagnose pigment disorders of the skin (moles, benign lesions, malignant lesions, carcinomas, melanomas, etc.), the dermatological techniques are based on criteria called ABCDE. Thus, the evolution of a pigment disorder into cancer is characterized by:
asymmetry (A) of the melanoma,
irregular border (B),
unusual color (C),
changing diameter (D)
unusual evolution (E).
In addition, dermatologists attempt to assess the non-uniformity of the thickness of the pigment disorder using two-dimensional imaging techniques such as dermoscopy or dermatoscopy which are not suitable for reliable characterization of the evolution of the pigment disorder at depth. In some cases, to confirm the diagnosis, the expensive practice of biopsies and histopathology examinations is carried out.
The challenge for dermatologists is to identify suspicious “moles” as early as possible and to develop new semiotics, i.e. the correspondence between what is observed and the pathology.
In the context of the diagnosis of pigment disorders, the most common technique, epiluminescence or dermatoscopy, is based on the use of a video microscope, most often digital, so that the image can be analyzed using the well-known ABCD criteria. More recently, new equipment has appeared, such as, for example, the Siascope from Astron Clinica and the MelaFind from Electro-Optical Systems. They are both based on multispectral information in the visible and near-infrared and differ in the associated information processing tools.
The Siascope is associated with a simple physical model and provides the user with calculated images of the melanin and hemoglobin. In a more advanced version, the practitioner has information on the localization of the melanin at depth, which is very important information for the diagnosis of certain pigmented lesions. However, the localization at depth is linked to the accuracy of the mathematical model used. A complete model of backscattering of light from the skin and its internal structure remains very difficult to obtain, very little data being available in the literature to validate this approach.
The MelaFind system, as the name suggests, analyzes images of pigment spots for the sole purpose of detecting melanoma. The images of these pigment spots are orthoimages. The associated digital tools are not based on a physical model, but essentially consist of a classification algorithm which compares any new spot with the existing database and returns a response of yes/no type to the operator. This type of device may be up to the task of diagnosis, or screening or prevention, but not to the task of therapeutic action and follow-up.
In practice, a skin biopsy with histology is used in addition. However, this approach is ill-suited to considering the subject's biochemical parameters. It remains dominated by Breslow's index, measuring the maximum thickness of the tumor on a histological section, and is therefore limited by the number and the quality of the sections, and is artificially reduced by regressive aspects with standardized consensual but empirical margins dependent on the thickness of the tumor as assessed by Breslow; the margins are not always compatible with the topography of the tumor (face), they are standardized and dependent on the clinically visible size of the tumor (to 1 cm) and are difficult to specify in certain clinical forms (morpheaform and micronodular basal-cell carcinoma).
There are many other cutaneous pathologies of various origins but they are often linked to the main chromophores of the skin, with devices dedicated to a single pathology (as in the case of MelaFind, as described above).
The aim of the invention is to alleviate these drawbacks.
More specifically, the subject of the invention is an imaging system for a cutaneous pigment disorder which comprises:
a device for acquiring 2D images of the pigment disorder comprising:
It is primarily characterized in that it further comprises:
The dimensions of the protective structure are advantageously compatible with a portable acquisition device.
According to one feature of the invention, the acquisition device comprises a multicellular structure with one receiver per cell.
According to another feature of the invention, the acquisition device comprises a light source emitting in the visible band, and means for acquiring the images simultaneously via the receivers.
The positioning means comprise, for example, a rail on which one or more receivers are positioned, and means for rotating the rail. The rail may be a sliding rail with a single receiver or a single emitter-receiver.
The light source may be multiwavelength in the visible and near-infrared bands, and/or the band of the first therapeutic window and/or the band of the second therapeutic window and/or the SWIR band, the one or more receivers corresponding to said wavelengths and being synchronized with the emitters, and the acquisition device comprising means for acquiring the images successively via the receivers at a rate of at least one image per wavelength and per viewing angle.
By virtue in particular of the illumination of the skin in the visible and near-infrared bands (0.4 μm to 1.1 μm) and/or SWIR (short-wave infrared, from 1.1 μm to 2.2 μm), and/or those of the first or second therapeutic window, this novel imaging system allows 2D visualization at various viewing angles, 3D volume visualization of pigment disorders and their cutaneous roots, using a non-invasive optical device and associated 2D and 3D visualization and processing modules.
The system, which is based on volume illumination, allows direct observation after three-dimensional reconstruction of the pigment disorder through its depth.
The system according to the invention is sufficiently generic to be adapted to, if not all, at least a large number of skin pathologies. By virtue of the 3D volume visualization which allows both external and internal viewing of the pigment disorder, it makes it possible to reveal structures and signs that are invisible to the naked eye (internal), to improve the performance of the clinical diagnosis of pigmented lesions, to detect parameters allowing the differential diagnosis between melanoma and nevus to be to refined (localization, quantity or quality of melanin, highlighting of neovascularization around the melanoma, depth of the melanoma structure, etc.).
It is possible, by virtue of the 3D volume imaging combined with the 2D two-dimensional imaging at various viewing angles, to better view the three-dimensional limits of a pigment disorder and of a potential tumor, to be certain of the complete exeresis of a malign cutaneous tumor, the conditions for healing and improve the functional prognosis.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from reading the following detailed description, given by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
From one figure to another, the same elements bear the same references.
According to the invention, the imaging system for pigment disorders described with reference to
A device A for acquiring 2D images at various viewing angles and potentially at various wavelengths for each viewing angle, which generates raw 2D images S1 and the associated data (viewing angles and wavelength).
An image processing unit B which generates processed 2D images S2 from the raw images S1 and the associated data and which preferably also generates a 3D reconstruction S3 of the pigment disorder and of its roots on the basis of the processed images S2.
Means D1 for 2D visualization, at various viewing angles, of the pigment disorder on the basis of the processed 2D images S2.
Means D2 for 3D visualization of the pigment disorder and of its reconstructed roots S3.
The image processing unit B and/or the visualization means D1 and D2 may be remote from the acquisition device A.
The image processing unit B performs RAW conversions to an usable image format (JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc.), corrections for optical aberrations, framing, centering, registration, calibration, scaling, thresholding, and angular indexing of the raw images S1. Processed images S2 are obtained. Examples of processed 2D images S2 of a nevus at various viewing angles (20°, 30°, . . . , 160°, 170°) are given in
Preferably, as shown in
These images S3 are of point-cloud, isodensity, voxel-rendering type (for example maximum intensity projection (MIP), as described in patent EP 3 234 914 B1: Method for discrimination and identification of objects of a scene by 3D imaging. The MIP technique makes it possible to visualize three-dimensional data in a two-dimensional plane. The voxels (volume pixels) are projected onto a 2D plane; the voxels are determined by the rays meeting the projection plane at the observation point and applying an imposed intensity threshold to the voxels. A plurality of projection planes are created at successive observation angles in order to obtain an impression of depth and thus improve the 3D rendering. An illustration of a rendering of the voxels of the reconstructed 3D volume (S3) of a nevus is given in
The 2D (images S2) and 3D (images S3) visualization means D1 and D2 are typically PCs, tablets, mobile telephones (“smartphones”) or any other visualization means.
The device A for acquiring 2D images, at various viewing angles, of the pigment disorder, shown in
a light source configured to illuminate the pigment disorder. It comprises one or more emitters oriented toward the pigment disorder 60 (an example of which is shown in
one or more receivers 303 (shown in
It is possible to have devices referred to as emitter-receivers 3 integrating the emitting function and the receiving function within the same device as shown in
means for positioning the one or more receivers (or even also the one or more emitters) at M viewing angles (M≥2) with respect to the pigment disorder which are distributed over a spherical cap as can be seen in
According to one embodiment, the acquisition device comprises a multicellular structure, each cell 6 containing a receiver, or an emitter-receiver 3. This structure takes the shape of the spherical cap as shown in
The acquisition device may be adapted from or integrated into a mobile telephone (smartphone).
the acquisition device further comprises a structure 1 for protecting the operator 50 and the emitters and receivers, which generally follows the shape of the positioning means as shown in the figures, but other shapes may be envisaged (cubic, or compound or other). This structure 1 comprises a window for positioning the acquisition device so as to direct it toward the disorder 60. The positioning window is arranged at the apex of the protective structure 1, on the normal to the disorder 60 along the axis z (the skin is in a plane xy). Thus, the operator may position, by way of direct visual inspection, the acquisition device so that the window faces the disorder 60, as illustrated in
Preferably, the dimensions of the structure 1 are compatible with a portable acquisition device A which is easy to place on various parts of the body: when the structure 1 forms for example a dome as shown in the figures, it typically has a radius of <15 cm. The structure may also be fixed and of larger dimensions.
By way of non-limiting example, the interfacing (35) is of the type: memory card slot, USB, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc.
Two image acquisition techniques may be used:
“Active” imaging technique: it concerns the visible and infrared bands. The pigment disorder is illuminated by the emitting sources 301, 302 of the emitter-receivers 3, the positioning window no longer being transparent to the ambient light from outside the device; this window is for example masked by the operator or may also be equipped with a shutter as indicated above. Illumination may be performed successively in a plurality of wavelengths for each viewing angle. The pigment disorder is then imaged successively for each wavelength and for each viewing angle. The acquisition device then comprises means for successive acquisition which are synchronized with the illuminations, such as means for synchronizing the receivers with the emitters. This technique makes it possible to obtain a 3D image of the surface volume of the disorder and a deep three-dimensional imaging of the pigment disorder. Advantageously, for each image capture, the emitting angle and the receiving angle are oriented and equal, or near-equal, with respect to the normal to the plane containing the skin. These angles (θ, φ) are illustrated in
The invention makes it possible to obtain a three-dimensional volume image by way of illumination in the “first therapeutic window” (650 nm-950 nm); this approach results in increased spatial resolution and minimized background noise The use of three-dimensional imaging, the spectroscopic properties (photon absorption and emission) of which lie within the first therapeutic window, allows access to the imaging of “thick” tissues.
The “second therapeutic window” (1000 nm-1350 nm) makes it possible to increase the depth of penetration of the wave due to the minimization of photon scattering, and it is thus possible to obtain light transmission over several millimeters in depth. This emission window provides additional information on the evolution of the roots of the nevus and its microvascularization.
The scattering of the light wave from the various wavelengths used allows an array of three-dimensional reconstructions of pigment disorders and therefore complete and comparative information on pigment disorders given that the effects of scattering of light waves from pigment disorders are complementary (depth of scattering, scattering cross section, determination of the roughness of the scattering structure) according to the illumination wavelengths used.
Thus, the obtained two-dimensional images are used to obtain a three-dimensional reconstruction of the skin at depth, in particular for those illumination wavelengths having a high penetrating power with respect the tissues of the skin.
This 2D and 3D imaging system applies mainly to the biomedical field, to the identification of cutaneous or subcutaneous disorders. In the context of non-melanoma skin cancers (basal-cell carcinoma, squamous-cell carcinoma for example), the system according to the invention allows precise visualization of the three-dimensional limits of the tumor, which makes it possible to be certain of the complete exeresis of a malignant skin tumor which is a condition for healing.
Thus, the most frequent simple nodular forms (45 to 60% of cases) are very clearly delimited, but within these simple forms there may be a micronodular form, without peripheral delimitation and requiring greater margins of exeresis, the three-dimensional image allowing precise representation of these complex shapes.
Thus, the three-dimensional imaging makes it possible to reveal structures and signs that are invisible to the naked eye, improving the performance of the clinical diagnosis of pigmented lesions, to detect three-dimensional parameters allowing the differential diagnosis between melanomas, carcinomas and nevi to be refined (localization, shape, depth, highlighting of vascularization around the melanoma/carcinoma, changes to microrelief, changes to the dermoepidermal junction, vascular changes, visualization of the limits of the tumor which makes it possible to be certain of the complete exeresis of a skin tumor).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1871843 | Nov 2018 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/080330 | 11/6/2019 | WO | 00 |