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e-Article

Optical Coherence Tomography as an Oral Cancer Screening Adjunct in a Low Resource Settings
Document Type
article
Source
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics. 25(1)
Subject
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
Clinical Research
Biomedical Imaging
Bioengineering
Rare Diseases
Cancer
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Diagnostic Radiology
Optical Physics
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Quantum Physics
Optoelectronics & Photonics
Language
Abstract
Oral cancer is the sixth most common cancer worldwide, predominantly seen in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). Two thirds of all cases are detected at a late stage when prognosis and treatment outcomes are poor. Oral lesions are commonly detected by visual inspection, followed by invasive surgical biopsy and time consuming histopathological analysis. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), a minimally invasive tomographic imaging technology, can be used to non-invasively identify premalignant or malignant change in the oral mucosa. In this study, a mobile OCT imaging system was designed, constructed and tested for its performance as a point-of-care oral diagnostic device. Twenty patients with suspicious leukoplakic or erythroplakic oral lesions and 10 healthy subjects were enrolled in this pilot study. Two dimensional OCT images as well as clinical examination data, risk habit history and histopathology were collected. Retrospective data from 10 subjects each with typical OCT images for oral mucosal health, dysplasia and malignancy were evaluated in a blinded fashion by visual scoring and image processing techniques. It was found that the OCT image processing algorithm preformed at and in certain cases exceed the performance of visual observer scoring of OCT images.