Development of angle-resolved low coherence interferometry for clinical detection of dysplasia

Authors

  • Yizheng Zhu, Neil G Terry, Adam Wax Author

Keywords:

Barrett′s esophagus, cell morphology, endoscopy, optical techniques.

Abstract

This review covers the development of angle-resolved low coherence interferometry (a/LCI) from initial development through clinical application. In the first applications, the approach used a time-domain interferometry scheme and was validated using animal models of carcinogenesis to assess the feasibility of detecting dysplasia in situ. Further development of the approach led to Fourier-domain interferometry schemes with higher throughput and endoscope-compatible probes to enable clinical application. These later implementations have been applied to clinical studies of dysplasia in Barrett’s esophagus tissues, a metaplastic tissue type that is associated with an increased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma. As an alternative to systematic biopsy, the a/LCI approach offers high sensitivity and specificity for detecting dysplasia in these tissues while avoiding the need for tissue removal or exogenous contrast agents. Here, the various implementations of a/LCI are discussed and the results of the preliminary animal experiments and ex vivo human tissue studies are reviewed. A review of a recent in vivo clinical study is also presented.

Published

2011-03-10

How to Cite

Development of angle-resolved low coherence interferometry for clinical detection of dysplasia. (2011). Journal of Carcinogenesis, 10(1). https://carcinogenesis.com/index.php/JOC/article/view/148

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