The present invention relates to relates to methods and arrangement for viewing and analyzing of one or more biological samples and anatomic structures with progressively increasing resolutions.
Radiological techniques such as X-ray computed tomography (“CT”), magnetic resonance imaging (“MRI”), and ultrasound can enable noninvasive visualization of human pathology at the organ level. Although these modalities may be capable of identifying large-scale pathology, the diagnosis of cancer can require the evaluation of microscopic structures that is beyond the resolution of conventional imaging techniques. Consequently, biopsy and histopathologic examination may be required for diagnosis. Because precancerous growth and early stage cancers often arise on a microscopic scale, they can present significant challenges for identification and diagnosis. Conventional screening and surveillance of these pathologies relies on unguided biopsy and morphological analysis of Hematoxylin and Eosin (“H&E”) stained slides. Although this approach may be regarded as a current standard for microscopic diagnosis, it requires the removal of tissue from the patient and significant processing time to generate slides. More importantly, histopathology is inherently a point sampling technique; frequently only a very small fraction of the diseased tissue can be excised and often less than 1% of a biopsy sample may be examined by a pathologist.
It may be preferable to obtain microscopic diagnoses from an entire organ or biological system in a living human patient. However, the lack of an appropriate imaging technology can greatly limits options for screening for pre-neoplastic conditions (e.g. metaplasia) and dysplasia. In addition, an inability to identify areas of dysplasia and carcinoma in situ has led to screening procedures such as, e.g., random biopsy of the prostate, colon, esophagus, and bladder, etc., which can be highly undesirable and indiscriminate. Many diagnostic tasks presently referred to a frozen section laboratory, such as the delineation of surgical tumor margins, could be improved by a diagnostic modality capable of rapidly imaging large tissue volumes on a microscopic scale. A technology that could fill this gap between pathology and radiology would be of great benefit to patient management and health care.
Technical advances have been made to increase the resolution of non-invasive imaging techniques such as, e.g., micro-CT, micro-PET, and magnetic resonance imaging (“MRI”) microscopy. Resolutions approaching 20 μm have been achieved by these technologies, but fundamental physical limitations can still prevent their application in patients. Microscopic optical biopsy techniques, performed in situ, have recently been advanced for non-excisional histopathologic diagnosis. Reflectance confocal microscopy (“RCM”) may be particularly well-suited for non-invasive microscopy in patients, as it is capable of measuring microscopic structure without tissue contact and does not require the administration of extrinsic contrast agents. RCM can reject out of focus light and detects backscattered photons selectively originating from a single plane within the tissue. RCM can be implemented, e.g., by rapidly scanning a focused beam of electromagnetic radiation in a plane parallel to a tissue surface, yielding transverse or en face images of tissue. The large numerical aperture (NA) that may be used in RCM can yield a very high spatial resolution (1-2 μm), enabling visualization of subcellular structures. High NA imaging, however, can be particularly sensitive to aberrations that arise as light propagates through inhomogeneous tissue. Also, high-resolution imaging with RCM is typically limited to a depth of about 100-400 μm.
RCM has been extensively demonstrated as a viable imaging technique for skin tissue. Development of endoscopic confocal microscopy systems has been more difficult, owing at least in part to the substantial technical challenges involved in miniaturizing a scanning microscope. One major obstacle to direct application of the concepts of confocal microscopy to endoscopy is the engineering of a mechanism for rapidly rastering a focused beam at the distal end of a small-diameter, flexible probe. A variety of approaches have been proposed to address this problem, including the use of distal micro-electromechanical systems (“MEMS”) beam scanning devices and proximal scanning of single-mode fiber bundles. Also, RCM may provide microscopic images only at discrete locations—a “point sampling” technique. As currently implemented, point sampling can be inherent to RCM because it has a limited field of view, which may be comparable to or less than that of an excisional biopsy, and the imaging rate can be too slow for comprehensive large field microscopy.
Another challenge in adapting confocal microscopy to endoscopic applications can include miniaturization of high NA objectives that may be used for optical sectioning. Such miniaturization may be achieved by providing, e.g., a gradient-index lens system, dual-axis objectives, or custom designs of miniature objectives. For example, detailed images of the morphology of cervical epithelium may be obtained in vivo using a fiber optic bundle coupled to a miniature objective lens, and fluorescence-based images of colorectal lesions may be achieved using commercial instruments such as those which may be obtained, e.g., from Olympus Corp. and Pentax/Optiscan.
Despite these advances, there may be a need to provide methods and arrangement that can parse data (e.g., provided either at the cellular level, architectural level or both that can be obtained from large surface areas or even possibly entire organs) so that it may be appropriately interpreted in a timely, accurate manner. Indeed, the amount of this data can be large and difficult to view at one time such data, and thus such methods and arrangements would be beneficial for viewing and analysis thereof.
One of the objects of the present invention is to overcome certain deficiencies and shortcomings of the prior art systems (including those described herein above), and provide exemplary embodiments of methods and arrangement for viewing and analyzing of one or more biological samples and anatomic structures with progressively increasing resolutions. Such exemplary methods and arrangements can be used along with a visual inspection of the data or by automatic processing procedures of the data to guide the visualization of areas that are most likely to contain abnormal and/or unhealthy tissue.
Accordingly, method, apparatus and arrangement according an exemplary embodiment of the present invention can be provided and which may analyze and/or illustrate at least one portion of an anatomical structure. For example, ain such exemplary embodiment, light can be forwarded to such portion so as to generate first information which is related to the portion. For example, the light can be provided on or within a subject. The first information can be received, and at least one section of the portion may be selected based on the first information so as to generate second information. A magnification of a display of the portion may be progressively modified as a function of the second information.
In a further exemplary embodiment of the present invention, display of position and/or depth of the at least one portion can be modified (e.g., within the anatomical structure). The second information can be associated with a region provided within such portion, and/or may be obtained by user-selecting the region. The selection can be automatically performed by a processing arrangement without an input from a user. An area of an abnormality within the at least one portion can be determined, and the processing arrangement may perform the selection and modification so as to display at least one section of the abnormality. An area of an abnormality can be determined within the portion using the processing arrangement so as to generate third information, and the selection can be performed by the user and/or the processing arrangement as a function of the third information.
According to yet another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the first information can be associated with two-, three- or four or more-dimensional, representation of the portion. Further, the portion can have an area that is greater than 1 mm2 and/or 10 mm2. A displayed section of the portion can have an area is less than 1 cm2, 1 mm2 and/or 100 μ2. The first information can be associated with a confocal microscopy procedure, a spectrally-encoded confocal microscopy procedure, an optical coherence tomography procedure, and/or an optical frequency domain interferometry procedure. An arrangement can be situated within the anatomical structure so as to provide the light to the portion.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description of embodiments of the invention, when taken in conjunction with the appended claims.
Further objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures showing illustrative embodiments of the present invention, in which:
Throughout the figures, the same reference numerals and characters, unless otherwise stated, are used to denote like features, elements, components or portions of the illustrated embodiments. Moreover, while the subject invention will now be described in detail with reference to the figures, it is done so in connection with the illustrative embodiments. It is intended that changes and modifications can be made to the described embodiments without departing from the true scope and spirit of the subject invention as defined by the appended claims.
In accordance with exemplary embodiments of the present invention, methods and arrangement according to exemplary embodiments of the present invention can be provided for viewing and analyzing of one or more biological samples and anatomic structures with progressively increasing resolutions. Such exemplary methods and arrangements can be used along with a visual inspection of the data or by automatic processing procedures of the data to guide the visualization of areas that are most likely to contain abnormal and/or unhealthy tissue.
An exemplary SECM technique is shown in
SECM techniques may allow the use of endoscopic RCM, and it can be capable of providing image data at extremely high rates using high-speed linear CCD cameras. Commercially available linear CCD arrays can obtain data at a rate greater than about 60 million pixels per second. When incorporated into an SECM spectrometer, these arrays can produce confocal images at speeds that are about 10 times faster than a typical video rate and up to 100 times faster than some endoscopic RCM techniques. The rapid imaging rate and fiber-optic design of typical SECM systems can permit comprehensive, large area microscopy through an endoscopic probe.
Techniques using optical coherence tomography (“OCT”) and variations thereof may be used for comprehensive architectural screening. Acquiring an OCT signal in the wavelength domain, rather than in the time domain, can provide orders of magnitude improvement in imaging speed while maintaining excellent image quality. Using spectral domain OCT (“SD-OCT”) techniques, high-resolution ranging can be conducted in biological tissue by detecting spectrally resolved interference between a tissue sample and a reference. Because SD-OCT systems can utilize the same high-speed linear CCD's as SECM systems, they can also be capable of capturing images at 60 million pixels/s, which is approximately two orders of magnitude faster than conventional time-domain OCT (“TD-OCT”) systems. With this acquisition rate and resolution, SD-OCT systems can provide comprehensive volumetric microscopy at the architectural level in a clinical environment.
The information provided by SD-OCT and SECM systems can be complementary, and a hybrid platform utilizing both techniques can provide information on the architectural and cellular structure of tissue that may be essential to accurate diagnosis. Although a combination of disparate technologies typically requires extensive engineering and may compromises performance, SECM and SD-OCT systems can share key components, and a high-performance multi-modality system can be provided without substantially increasing complexity or cost of the individual systems.
An SECM system in accordance with certain exemplary embodiments of the present invention can utilize a wavelength-swept 1300 nm source and a single-element photodetector to obtain spectrally encoded information as a function of time. With this system, images can be acquired at rates of up to about 30 frames/second having high lateral (1.4 μm) and axial (6 μm) resolutions, over a 400 μm field of view (“FOV”). Images of freshly excised swine duodenum segments were imaged ex vivo with a high speed system to illustrate the capability of an SECM system to identify subcellular structures that may be found in specialized intestinal metaplasia (“SIM”), the metaplastic change of BE.
The thickness of an esophageal wall being imaged in vivo using OCT techniques can be decreased, e.g., by about a factor of two using an inflated balloon. The swine intestinal sample shown in
The penetration depth of a commercial 800 nm laser scanning confocal microscope was observed to be reduced by about 20% as compared to that obtained with a 1300 nm SECM system. This reduced penetration may be a result of increased scattering of the shorter wavelength source. Thus an SECM system using an 840 nm source may provide sufficient penetration to identify subcellular structure of, e.g., an intestinal epithelium.
An apparatus in accordance with certain exemplary embodiments of the present invention that is configured to provide comprehensive SECM images is illustrated schematically in
Light reflected from the sample was transmitted back through the optical system into the single-mode fiber 412 and provided by the fiber 412 to a spectrometer 450 and linear CCD 455 that includes 2048 pixels and has a 30 kHz line rate (Basler L104K, Basler Vision Technologies, Exton, Pa.). A computer 460 was used to store, analyze and display image data provided by the spectrometer 450 and CCD 455. Approximately 60,000 points per motor rotation (at 0.5 Hz, or 30 rpm) were digitized to achieve a 1.0 μm circumferential sampling density. The longitudinal velocity of the motor was 0.25 mm/s and the time required for one complete scan of the cylindrical sample was 100 seconds.
The 1/e2 diameter of the collimated beam on the grating-lens pair was 4.0 mm. As a result, the effective NA of this exemplary apparatus was approximately 0.4, which corresponds to a theoretical spot diameter of approximately 1.2 μm and a confocal parameter of approximately 2.5 μm. In a system that is free of optical aberrations, the theoretical spectral resolution on the sample may be 0.8 Å, which can yield up to approximately 630 resolvable points across the spectrally encoded line 430. The spectrometer 450 in the detection arm was designed to exceed the predicted spectral resolution of the probe.
An SECM scan of a 1951 USAF resolution chart obtained using this apparatus is shown in
SECM image data for a complete pullback image of a 2.5 cm phantom specimen are shown in
By adjusting the focusing apparatus 415 in
Imaging biological samples using an SECM apparatus such as that described herein can be complicated by the lack of a centering apparatus for the optical scan head. In order to provide further improvements for generating wide-field microscopy images and data, a sample of swine intestine was placed on top of a 2.0 cm diameter transparent cylinder. A 360° scan of this sample, which was acquired in 1 second, is shown in
Conducting comprehensive confocal microscopy in patients can present a variety of technical challenges. Such challenges may include, e.g., increasing the imaging rate, miniaturizing the probe optics and mechanical components, incorporating a centering mechanism, and implementing a technique for dynamically changing the focal plane.
The image acquisition speed of an SECM system can be improved by, e.g., a factor of about 2-4 as compared with the exemplary system described hereinabove. Such an improvement can be realized by providing certain modifications. For example, a higher power semiconductor light source (such as, e.g., a Superlum Diode, T-840 HP: 25 mW, 840 nm, 100 nm spectral bandwidth) can provide 1000 spectrally resolvable points. The increase in optical power can improve sensitivity and the larger bandwidth may widen the field of view, making it possible to scan the SECM beam approximately two times faster. Also, using an optical circulator such as, e.g., an OC-3-850 (Optics for Research, Caldwell, N.J.) can increase the efficiency of light delivered to the probe and collected from the probe. Using a faster, more sensitive linear CCD such as, for example, an AVIIVA M4-2048 having 2048 pixels and a 60 kHz readout rate (Atmel Corporation,) can provide a twofold increase in data acquisition speed and an improved spectral response over the wavelength range used to generate image data. Performance may also be improved by using, e.g., a Camera Link interface that can be capable of transferring data at a rate of approximately 120 MB/s from a camera to a hard-drive array for storage.
Sensitivity, which can be understood to refer to a minimum detectable reflectance, is a system parameter that can affect confocal image quality and penetration depth. A fraction of the incident light, which may be approximately 10−4 to 10−7, can be reflected from skin at depths up to approximately 300 μm when using a near-infrared RCM technique. Based on the NA of the objective lens used in the exemplary system in accordance with certain exemplary embodiments of the present invention described herein and the observation that skin may attenuate light more significantly than non-keratinized epithelial mucosa, the exemplary SECM probe objective described herein may collect approximately 3×10−4 to 3×10−7 of the illuminating light reflected from deep within tissue. The 25 mW light source may be separated into, e.g., approximately 1000 independent beams. A maximum double pass insertion loss can be estimated to be approximately 10 dB (6 dB from the probe, and 4 dB from the fiber optics and spectrometer). Each pixel in an array may thus be illuminated by approximately 50 to 50,000 photons/pixel for each line integration period based on these estimated parameters.
Using a multi-mode detection technique, a factor of 10 signal gain may be achieved, resulting in approximately 500 to 500,000 photons/pixel per scan for such a configuration. A single pixel on an Atmel AVIIVA M4 camera, e.g., can reliably detect light if a signal is above the dark current fluctuation that occurs at approximately 240 photons. If this device has approximately a 50% quantum efficiency at these wavelengths, a minimum detectable signal can be produced at approximately 480 photons/pixel per scan. Based on these approximations, an Atmel camera may have sufficient sensitivity to allow SECM imaging at deeper tissue depths. Quantum noise-limited detection of a predicted minimum reflectance can be achieved by using a multi-mode fiber for collection or by increasing the source power.
According to one exemplary embodiment of the present invention, methods and arrangements can be provided for navigating, analyze and display large microscopic datasets from anatomical structures.
For example,
For example,
The entire exemplary process illustrated in
The exemplary embodiment of the navigation procedure described herein can be implemented by the computer 460, and also utilize various processing techniques to assist the user in determining various areas to magnify and view the sample, and different portions and regions thereof. For example,
As shown in
These and other exemplary image processing analysis procedures and steps can be applied to the microscopic data set and utilized to highlight regions of potential disease for subsequent directed navigation.
The user can then select a region to view in step 1340, guided by the processing data and the representation thereof. The user may then view the data set and, using a computer interface, select (a) a rectangular region, (a) a point, (c) an arbitrary shaped region, and/or (d) a depth in which to visualize a higher magnification view. The new region can be viewed, and the user (or the computer 460) can manually or automatically (a) select another region, (b) zoom in at a point/zoom out (step 1350), (d) translate the current view in three dimensions, and/or (e) change the depth location of viewing within the dataset. Further, in step 1360, the user can view the newly illustrated region. The exemplary method/procedure may be repeated until the area(s) of interest is/are identified for visualization. The user or the computer 460 can select different images at any magnification or view to store for later inspection. Labeling of each individual view can also be conducted during the exemplary navigation process. The regions/images at different magnifications/locations can be bookmarked and stored so that the user can return to the same region/image during a subsequent navigation session.
The foregoing merely illustrates the principles of the invention. Various modifications and alterations to the described embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings herein. Indeed, the arrangements, systems and methods according to the exemplary embodiments of the present invention can be used with any OCT system, OFDI system, SD-OCT system or other imaging systems, and for example with those described in International Patent Application PCT/US2004/029148, filed Sep. 8, 2004, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/266,779, filed Nov. 2, 2005, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/501,276, filed Jul. 9, 2004, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise numerous systems, arrangements and methods which, although not explicitly shown or described herein, embody the principles of the invention and are thus within the spirit and scope of the present invention. In addition, to the extent that the prior art knowledge has not been explicitly incorporated by reference herein above, it is explicitly being incorporated herein in its entirety. All publications referenced herein above are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/721,802, filed Sep. 29, 2005, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60721802 | Sep 2005 | US |