학술논문

Scanning elastic scattering spectroscopy detects metastatic breast cancer in sentinel lymph nodes.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Biomedical Optics. Jul2010, Vol. 15 Issue 4, p047001-047001-8. 1p.
Subject
*METASTASIS
*BREAST cancer
*SENTINEL lymph nodes
*ABSORPTION spectra
*CYTOLOGY
*SPECTRUM analysis
*ELASTIC scattering
Language
ISSN
1083-3668
Abstract
A novel method for rapidly detecting metastatic breast cancer within excised sentinel lymph node(s) of the axilla is presented. Elastic scattering spectroscopy (ESS) is a point-contact technique that collects broadband optical spectra sensitive to absorption and scattering within the tissue. A statistical discrimination algorithm was generated from a training set of nearly 3000 clinical spectra and used to test clinical spectra collected from an independent set of nodes. Freshly excised nodes were bivalved and mounted under a fiber-optic plate. Stepper motors raster-scanned a fiber-optic probe over the plate to interrogate the node’s cut surface, creating a 20×20grid of spectra. These spectra were analyzed to create a map of cancer risk across the node surface. Rules were developed to convert these maps to a prediction for the presence of cancer in the node. Using these analyses, a leave-one-out cross-validation to optimize discrimination parameters on 128 scanned nodes gave a sensitivity of 69 for detection of clinically relevant metastases (71 for macrometastases) and a specificity of 96, comparable to literature results for touch imprint cytology, a standard technique for intraoperative diagnosis. ESS has the advantage of not requiring a pathologist to review the tissue sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]