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Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study

Context: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an emergent imaging technique, based on the interference of infrared radiation and living tissues, that allows the in vivo visualisation of the skin structures, at high resolution and up to 1.6 mm depth. As such, there is mounting evidence that OCT may...

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Autores principales: Forsea, AM, Carstea, EM, Ghervase, L, Giurcaneanu, C, Pavelescu, G
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Carol Davila University Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3019059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21254735
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author Forsea, AM
Carstea, EM
Ghervase, L
Giurcaneanu, C
Pavelescu, G
author_facet Forsea, AM
Carstea, EM
Ghervase, L
Giurcaneanu, C
Pavelescu, G
author_sort Forsea, AM
collection PubMed
description Context: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an emergent imaging technique, based on the interference of infrared radiation and living tissues, that allows the in vivo visualisation of the skin structures, at high resolution and up to 1.6 mm depth. As such, there is mounting evidence that OCT may be an interesting technique for the diagnossis of skin diseases, including the non–invasive early detection of cutaneous tumors. Objective: We aimed to investigate the utility of OCT for the diagnosis of non–melanocytic, non–pigmented cutaneous tumors. Methods: Preliminary results are presented from an initiated study. Fifteen consecutive patients with clinical suspicion of epithelial cancers and precancers registered over one week in an university dermatologic department were included. As control were selected 7 patients with inflammatory skin diseases (psoriasis, lichen planus, cutaneous lupus erythematosus). In all study and control patients the lesions and samples of normal, perilesional skin were documented by clinical digital photography, contact dermoscopy with digital image capture and OCT with central wavelength of 930 nm. Final diagnosis was certified by histopathological analysis. Results: We could identify morphological features in OCT examination that distinguished between normal and lesional skin, and between neoplastic vs. inflamatory lesions. In the same time, combining OCT and dermatoscopical evaluation of a lesion improved the performance of diagnosis when compared to clinical diagnosis alone and with either OCT or dermoscopy imaging used alone. Conclusions: OCT appears as a promising method of in vivo diagnosis of early neoplastic cutaneous lesions with equivocal clinical and/or dermoscopic aspect. Continuation of our study as well as other larger investigation will be able to contribute with new insights in the role of OCT in the non–invasive diagnosis of skin disease.
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spelling pubmed-30190592011-03-03 Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study Forsea, AM Carstea, EM Ghervase, L Giurcaneanu, C Pavelescu, G J Med Life Original Article Context: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an emergent imaging technique, based on the interference of infrared radiation and living tissues, that allows the in vivo visualisation of the skin structures, at high resolution and up to 1.6 mm depth. As such, there is mounting evidence that OCT may be an interesting technique for the diagnossis of skin diseases, including the non–invasive early detection of cutaneous tumors. Objective: We aimed to investigate the utility of OCT for the diagnosis of non–melanocytic, non–pigmented cutaneous tumors. Methods: Preliminary results are presented from an initiated study. Fifteen consecutive patients with clinical suspicion of epithelial cancers and precancers registered over one week in an university dermatologic department were included. As control were selected 7 patients with inflammatory skin diseases (psoriasis, lichen planus, cutaneous lupus erythematosus). In all study and control patients the lesions and samples of normal, perilesional skin were documented by clinical digital photography, contact dermoscopy with digital image capture and OCT with central wavelength of 930 nm. Final diagnosis was certified by histopathological analysis. Results: We could identify morphological features in OCT examination that distinguished between normal and lesional skin, and between neoplastic vs. inflamatory lesions. In the same time, combining OCT and dermatoscopical evaluation of a lesion improved the performance of diagnosis when compared to clinical diagnosis alone and with either OCT or dermoscopy imaging used alone. Conclusions: OCT appears as a promising method of in vivo diagnosis of early neoplastic cutaneous lesions with equivocal clinical and/or dermoscopic aspect. Continuation of our study as well as other larger investigation will be able to contribute with new insights in the role of OCT in the non–invasive diagnosis of skin disease. Carol Davila University Press 2010-11-15 2010-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3019059/ /pubmed/21254735 Text en ©Carol Davila University Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Forsea, AM
Carstea, EM
Ghervase, L
Giurcaneanu, C
Pavelescu, G
Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title_full Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title_fullStr Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title_full_unstemmed Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title_short Clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
title_sort clinical application of optical coherence tomography for the imaging of non–melanocytic cutaneous tumors: a pilot multi–modal study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3019059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21254735
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