A current challenge is providing an accurate diagnosis in a timely manner for patients at risk of having prostate cancer. We developed and demonstrated a non-destructive procedure in which 12 biopsies can be cleared, fluorescently labeled, imaged with an open-top light-sheet (OTLS) microscope, and then diagnosed by a pathologist within an hour of biopsy. Using conventional histology as the gold standard, the accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 1Hr2Dx were all >90%. Such a method could potentially provide patients with a preliminary on-site diagnosis after a biopsy procedure, thereby alleviating anxiety and potentially expediting treatments.
Significance: Processing and diagnosing a set of 12 prostate biopsies using conventional histology methods typically take at least one day. A rapid and accurate process performed while the patient is still on-site could significantly improve the patient’s quality of life.
Aim: We develop and assess the feasibility of a one-hour-to-diagnosis (1Hr2Dx) method for processing and providing a preliminary diagnosis of a set of 12 prostate biopsies.
Approach: We developed a fluorescence staining, optical clearing, and 3D open-top light-sheet microscopy workflow to enable 12 prostate needle core biopsies to be processed and diagnosed within an hour of receipt. We analyzed 44 biopsies by the 1Hr2Dx method, which does not consume tissue. The biopsies were then processed for routine, slide-based 2D histology. Three pathologists independently evaluated the 3D 1Hr2Dx and 2D slide-based datasets in a blinded, randomized fashion. Turnaround times were recorded, and the accuracy of our method was compared with gold-standard slide-based histology.
Results: The average turnaround time for tissue processing, imaging, and diagnosis was 44.5 min. The sensitivity and specificity of 1Hr2Dx in diagnosing cancer were both >90 % .
Conclusions: The 1Hr2Dx method has the potential to improve patient care by providing an accurate preliminary diagnosis within an hour of biopsy.
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