Feasibility of using spatial frequency-domain imaging intraoperatively during tumor resection

Abstract. Mapping the optical absorption and scattering properties of tissues using spatial frequency-domain imaging (SFDI) enhances quantitative fluorescence imaging of protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) in gliomas in the preclinical setting. The feasibility of using SFDI in the operating room was investigated here. A benchtop SFDI system was modified to mount directly to a commercial operating microscope. A digital light processing module imposed a selectable spatial light pattern from a broad-band xenon arc lamp to illuminate the surgical field. White light excitation and a liquid crystal-tunable filter allowed the diffuse reflectance images to be recorded at discrete wavelengths from 450 to 720 nm on a sCMOS camera. The performance was first tested in tissue-simulating phantoms, and data were then acquired intraoperatively during brain tumor resection surgery. The optical absorption and transport scattering coefficients could be estimated with average errors of 3.2% and 4.5% for the benchtop and clinical systems, respectively, with spatial resolution of better than 0.7 mm. These findings suggest that SFDI can be implemented in a clinically relevant configuration to achieve accurate mapping of the optical properties in the surgical field that can then be applied to achieve quantitative imaging of the fluorophore.

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