Abstract

Mortality of oral cancer is often due to late diagnosis. Effective non-invasive diagnostic techniques may increase the survival rate based on an earlier diagnosis.. We report on the application of the polarization gating technique for isolating weakly scattered and highly scattered components of fluorescence emission from the superficial and deeper layers of tissue due to intrinsic fluorophores NADH and FAD. The fluorescence polarization spectra were collected from 21 normal and 67 oral squamous cell carcinoma biopsy tissues. The tissues were excited at 350 nm and the fluorescence emission had two peaks corresponding to NADH, and FAD respectively. The spectra were analyzed using the polarization gating technique along with the spectral deconvolution method to derive the optical redox ratio from different layers of tissue. The fractional change in redox ratio between superficial and deeper layers of tissue exhibits excellent statistical significance (p<10-3) which may be due to a shift in the metabolic pathway from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis in the cancer cell. Further, variation in collagen intensity in deeper layers of tissue is observed which may be attributed to the breakdown of collagen fibers in the stroma. Linear discriminant analysis showed that oral cancer tissue is discriminated with a better accuracy using polarization gating technique than that of conventional fluorescence spectroscopy.

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