Multimodal confocal mosaicing of basal cell carcinomas in Mohs surgical skin excisions Conference Paper


Authors: Gareau, D. S.; Patel, Y. G.; Li, Yongbiao; Nehal, K. S.; Huang, B.; Rajadhyaksha, M.
Title: Multimodal confocal mosaicing of basal cell carcinomas in Mohs surgical skin excisions
Conference Title: Multimodal Biomedical Imaging II
Abstract: Mohs surgery is a procedure for microscopically excising basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) while preserving maximal surrounding normal skin. Each serial excision is guided by examination of the frozen histology of the previous excision. Because several (2-20) excisions must be made and frozen histology prepared for each excision. Mohs surgery is time-consuming (15-45 minutes per excision) and tedious. Real-time confocal reflectance mosaicing enables detection of BCCs directly in fresh excisions, following contrast-enhancement by acetowhitening. A confocal mosaic allows rapid observation of 15×15 mm2 of tissue, which is equivalent to a low magnification, 2X view of the excision. Relatively large superficial nodular and micronodular BCCs are rapidly detectable in confocal reflectance mosaics, whereas detection of much smaller infiltrative and sclerosing BCCs is a challenge due to the lack of sufficient nuclear/dermis contrast in acetowhitened excisions. Multimodal contrast, combining reflectance with either fluorescence or autofluorescence may make it possible to detect infiltrative and sclerosing BCCs. A reflectance image shows both nuclei and the surrounding dermis, whereas an autofluorescence image (excitation at 488nm, detection 500-700nm) shows only the dermis. Thus, ability of a composite (i.e., reflectance-less-autofluorescence) image shows significantly darkened dermis, with stronger enhancement of nuclear/dermis contrast. Preliminary results illustrate that this may enable detection of infiltrative and sclerosing BCCs. The use of reflectance and autofluorescence parallels the use of two stains (hematoxylin and eosin) in histology, thus allowing a more complete optical detection method.
Keywords: fluorescence; histology; skin; contrast enhancement; surgery; biomedical engineering; carcinogens; basal cell carcinomas (bcc); confocal reflectance mosaics; optical detection
Journal Title Proceedings of SPIE
Volume: 6431
Conference Dates: 2007 Jan 20-23
Conference Location: San Jose, CA
ISBN: 0277-786X
Publisher: SPIE  
Date Published: 2007-01-01
Start Page: 64310U
Language: English
DOI: 10.1117/12.700672
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging - Proceedings of SPIE - Progr. Biomed. Opt. Imaging Proc. SPIE - "Conference code: 69484" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "Sponsors: SPIE" - 20 January 2007 through 23 January 2007 - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Kishwer S Nehal
    278 Nehal
  2. Daniel S Gareau
    23 Gareau
  3. William Chao-Hsiang Huang
    14 Huang
  4. Yongbiao Li
    20 Li
  5. Yogesh G Patel
    17 Patel