Abstract. Significance Fluorescently guided minimally invasive surgery is improving patient outcomes and disease-free survival, but biomarker variability hinders complete tumor resection with single molecular probes. To overcome this, we developed… Click to show full abstract
Abstract. Significance Fluorescently guided minimally invasive surgery is improving patient outcomes and disease-free survival, but biomarker variability hinders complete tumor resection with single molecular probes. To overcome this, we developed a bioinspired endoscopic system that images multiple tumor-targeted probes, quantifies volumetric ratios in cancer models, and detects tumors in ex vivo samples. Aim We present a new rigid endoscopic imaging system (EIS) that can capture color images while simultaneously resolving two near-infrared (NIR) probes. Approach Our optimized EIS integrates a hexa-chromatic image sensor, a rigid endoscope optimized for NIR-color imaging, and a custom illumination fiber bundle. Results Our optimized EIS achieves a 60% improvement in NIR spatial resolution when compared to a leading FDA-approved endoscope. Ratio-metric imaging of two tumor-targeted probes is demonstrated in vials and animal models of breast cancer. Clinical data gathered from fluorescently tagged lung cancer samples on the operating room’s back table demonstrate a high tumor-to-background ratio and consistency with the vial experiments. Conclusions We investigate key engineering breakthroughs for the single-chip endoscopic system, which can capture and distinguish numerous tumor-targeting fluorophores. As the molecular imaging field shifts toward a multi-tumor targeted probe methodology, our imaging instrument can aid in assessing these concepts during surgical procedures.
               
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