Abstract

Lumpectomy, also called breast-conserving surgery, has become the standard surgical treatment for early-stage breast cancer. However, accurately locating the tumor during a lumpectomy, especially when the lesion is small and nonpalpable, is a challenge. Such difficulty can lead to either incomplete tumor removal or prolonged surgical time, which result in high re-operation rates (~25%) and increased surgical costs. Here, we report a fiber optoacoustic guide (FOG) with augmented reality (AR) for sub-millimeter tumor localization and intuitive surgical guidance with minimal interference. The FOG is preoperatively implanted in the tumor. Under external pulsed light excitation, the FOG omnidirectionally broadcasts acoustic waves through the optoacoustic effect by a specially designed nano-composite layer at its tip. By capturing the acoustic wave, three ultrasound sensors on the breast skin triangulate the FOG tip’s position with 0.25-mm accuracy. An AR system with a tablet measures the coordinates of the ultrasound sensors and transforms the FOG tip’s position into visual feedback with <1-mm accuracy, thus aiding surgeons in directly visualizing the tumor location and performing fast and accurate tumor removal. We further show the use of a head-mounted display to visualize the same information in the surgeons’ first-person view and achieve hands-free guidance. Towards clinical application, a surgeon successfully deployed the FOG to excise a “pseudo tumor” in a female human cadaver. With the high-accuracy tumor localization by FOG and the intuitive surgical guidance by AR, the surgeon performed accurate and fast tumor removal, which will significantly reduce re-operation rates and shorten the surgery time.

Highlights

  • Introduction In the UnitedStates, breast cancer ranks second as a cause of cancer-related death in women[1]

  • fiber optoacoustic guide (FOG) omnidirectionally broadcasts the acoustic signal deep in the tissue Figure 2a shows that the FOG is a fiber-optics-based guide with a nano-composite formed at its distal end, which has an overall diameter of approximately 800 μm

  • A backward acoustic emission was observed in both water and human breast tissue, which proves an omnidirectional acoustic emission of FOG

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Summary

Materials and methods

Design of an FOG to locate the tumor with sub-millimeter accuracy in BCS surgery. In BCS, a surgical beacon is preoperatively implanted to mark the tumor location and guide the tumor removal in the operating room. An ideal surgical beacon in the tumor should be miniaturized (

18 G Needle
Results and discussion
Conclusions
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