90 research outputs found

    Technological Advances in the Diagnosis and Management of Pigmented Fundus Tumours

    Get PDF
    Choroidal naevi are the most common intraocular tumour. They can be pigmented or non-pigmented and have a predilection for the posterior uvea. The majority remain undetected and cause no harm but are increasingly found on routine community optometry examinations. Rarely does a naevus demonstrate growth or the onset of suspicious features to fulfil the criteria for a malignant melanoma. Because of this very small risk, optometrists commonly refer these patients to hospital eye units for a second opinion, triggering specialist examination and investigation, causing significant anxiety to patients and stretching medical resources. This PhD thesis introduces the MOLES acronym and scoring system that has been devised to categorise the risk of malignancy in choroidal melanocytic tumours according to Mushroom tumour shape, Orange pigment, Large tumour size, Enlarging tumour and Subretinal fluid. This is a simplified system that can be used without sophisticated imaging, and hence its main utility lies in the screening of patients with choroidal pigmented lesions in the community and general ophthalmology clinics. Under this system, lesions were categorised by a scoring system as ‘common naevus’, ‘low-risk naevus’, ‘high-risk naevus’ and ‘probable melanoma.’ According to the sum total of the scores, the MOLES system correlates well with ocular oncologists’ final diagnosis. The PhD thesis also describes a model of managing such lesions in a virtual pathway, showing that images of choroidal naevi evaluated remotely using a decision-making algorithm by masked non-medical graders or masked ophthalmologists is safe. This work prospectively validates a virtual naevus clinic model focusing on patient safety as the primary consideration. The idea of a virtual naevus clinic as a fast, one-stop, streamlined and comprehensive service is attractive for patients and healthcare systems, including an optimised patient experience with reduced delays and inconvenience from repeated visits. A safe, standardised model ensures homogeneous management of cases, appropriate and prompt return of care closer to home to community-based optometrists. This research work and strategies, such as the MOLES scoring system for triage, could empower community-based providers to deliver management of benign choroidal naevi without referral to specialist units. Based on the positive outcome of this prospective study and the MOLES studies, a ‘Virtual Naevus Clinic’ has been designed and adapted at Moorfields Eye Hospital (MEH) to prove its feasibility as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and with the purpose of reducing in-hospital patient journey times and increasing the capacity of the naevus clinics, while providing safe and efficient clinical care for patients. This PhD chapter describes the design, pathways, and operating procedures for the digitally enabled naevus clinics in Moorfields Eye Hospital, including what this service provides and how it will be delivered and supported. The author will share the current experience and future plan. Finally, the PhD thesis will cover a chapter that discusses the potential role of artificial intelligence (AI) in differentiating benign choroidal naevus from choroidal melanoma. The published clinical and imaging risk factors for malignant transformation of choroidal naevus will be reviewed in the context of how AI applied to existing ophthalmic imaging systems might be able to determine features on medical images in an automated way. The thesis will include current knowledge to date and describe potential benefits, limitations and key issues that could arise with this technology in the ophthalmic field. Regulatory concerns will be addressed with possible solutions on how AI could be implemented in clinical practice and embedded into existing imaging technology with the potential to improve patient care and the diagnostic process. The PhD will also explore the feasibility of developed automated deep learning models and investigate the performance of these models in diagnosing choroidal naevomelanocytic lesions based on medical imaging, including colour fundus and autofluorescence fundus photographs. This research aimed to determine the sensitivity and specificity of an automated deep learning algorithm used for binary classification to differentiate choroidal melanomas from choroidal naevi and prove that a differentiation concept utilising a machine learning algorithm is feasible

    In Vivo Vascular Imaging with Photoacoustic Microscopy

    Get PDF
    Photoacoustic (PA) tomography (PAT) has received extensive attention in the last decade for its capability to provide label-free structural and functional imaging in biological tissue with highly scalable spatial resolution and penetration depth. Compared to modern optical modalities, PAT offers speckle-free images and is more sensitive to optical absorption contrast (with 100% relative sensitivity). By implementing different regimes of optical wavelength, PAT can be used to image diverse light-absorbing biomolecules. For example, hemoglobin is of particular interest in the visible wavelength regime owing to its dominant absorption, and lipids and water are more commonly studied in the near-infrared regime. In this dissertation, one challenge was to quantitatively investigate red-blood-cell dynamics in nailfold capillaries with single-cell resolution PA microscopy (PAM). We recruited healthy volunteers and measured multiple hemodynamic parameters based on individual red blood cells (RBCs). Statistical analysis revealed the process of oxygen release and changes in flow speed for RBCs in a capillary. For the first time on record, oxygen release from individual RBCs in human capillaries was imaged with nearly real-time speed, and the work paved the way for our following study of a specific blood disorder. We next conducted a pilot study on sickle cell disease (SCD), measuring and comparing the parameters related to RBC dynamics between healthy subjects and patients with SCD. In the patient group, we found that capillaries tended to be more tortuous, dilated, and had higher number density. In addition, abnormal RBCs tended to have lower oxygenation in the inlet of a capillary, from where they flowed slower and released a larger fraction of oxygen than normal RBCs. As the only imaging modality able to observe the real-time dynamics of the oxygen release of individual RBCs, PAM provides medically valuable information for diagnostic purposes. As the last focus of this dissertation, we tackled the limited view problem in PAM by introducing an off-axis illumination technique for complementing the original detection view. We demonstrated this technique numerically and then experimentally on phantoms and animals. This simple but very effective method revealed abundant vertical vasculature in a mouse brain that had long been missed by conventional top-illumination PAM. This technique greatly advances future studies on neurovascular responses in mouse brains

    Objective localisation of oral mucosal lesions using optical coherence tomography.

    Get PDF
    PhDIdentification of the most representative location for biopsy is critical in establishing the definitive diagnosis of oral mucosal lesions. Currently, this process involves visual evaluation of the colour characteristics of tissue aided by topical application of contrast enhancing agents. Although, this approach is widely practiced, it remains limited by its lack of objectivity in identifying and delineating suspicious areas for biopsy. To overcome this drawback there is a need to introduce a technique that would provide macroscopic guidance based on microscopic imaging and analysis. Optical Coherence Tomography is an emerging high resolution biomedical imaging modality that can potentially be used as an in vivo tool for selection of the most appropriate site for biopsy. This thesis investigates the use of OCT for qualitative and quantitative mapping of oral mucosal lesions. Feasibility studies were performed on patient biopsy samples prior to histopathological processing using a commercial OCT microscope. Qualitative imaging results examining a variety of normal, benign, inflammatory and premalignant lesions of the oral mucosa will be presented. Furthermore, the identification and utilisation of a common quantifiable parameter in OCT and histology of images of normal and dysplastic oral epithelium will be explored thus ensuring objective and reproducible mapping of the progression of oral carcinogenesis. Finally, the selection of the most representative biopsy site of oral epithelial dysplasia would be investigated using a novel approach, scattering attenuation microscopy. It is hoped this approach may help convey more clinical meaning than the conventional visualisation of OCT images
    corecore