|
Catheter-based examination of arterial wall plaque characteristics is an important area of interest, especially as a means to study and diagnose atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, which is considered the main cause of death in developed nations.1 We report the development of a new catheter-based approach for the detection of atherosclerotic plaques using intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) as an anatomical guidance method for the positioning of optical catheters capable of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS). TRFS itself, which can utilize both spectral and time-domain parameters, has been shown to detect elastin, collagen, lipids, and other sources of autofluorescence in normal and diseased arterial walls that exhibit inflammatory processes as well as to characterize the biochemical composition of human atherosclerotic plaques both ex vivo and in vivo. The comparison of various optically based methods for the analysis of plaques has produced a compelling rationale for a TRFS approach. On the basis of accuracy of plaque type identification, the following optical modalities have produced quality metrics, in terms of sensitivity and specificity against tissue histology, of: TRFS (85%, 95%)2 and (81%, 94%),3 optical coherence tomography (OCT; ranges of 71 to 79% and 97 to 98%),4 Raman spectroscopy (79 and 85%),5 and near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy (ranges of 77 to 90% in sensitivity and 89% to 93% in specificity).6 OCT,7 Raman spectroscopy,8 and NIR spectroscopy9 have been implemented in catheter-based devices for use in coronary arteries. The multimodal, multifunctional device described here can provide the opportunity for enhanced plaque diagnosis. The current approach will not only facilitate intravascular use of TRFS as the high-quality means to determine plaque composition but will also enable assessment of the plaque morphology or structure. A practical means to implement the TRFS technique involves first an intravascular means of visual guidance for the optical fiber and second a steering method to coregister the optical fiber close to a particular arterial site in a moving blood environment. The novel approach described here addresses these issues to enable the optical and ultrasound modalities to operate in a beneficial and complementary way in a single multimodal catheter (MMC). IVUS is now a commonly used catheter-based ultrasonic imaging technique to diagnose and guide interventional therapeutic procedures with real-time arterial cross-section images. It can provide specific lesion site identification and can provide direct guidance to an intraluminal location, and subsequent relocation, of specific lesion sites of interest. IVUS, as a catheter standard for ease of use,10 is an obvious choice for the intraluminal guidance of the optical probe for use in obtaining TRFS data from sites of suspected vulnerable plaque. The optical fiber itself (RoMack, Inc., Williamsburg, Virginia) is a customized side-viewing optical fiber (SVOF), which is shown in Fig. 1 as OF. It is a -diam fused silica fiber (multimode, ) with a polished metalized mirror termination for beam deflection at to the fiber axis. The optical fiber is coupled to a dichroic mirror, which is coupled to a prototype TRFS apparatus in our lab. This apparatus is similar to a TRFS system we previously reported11 and allows for wavelength-resolved fluorescence lifetime measurements. In brief, a pulsed laser (MNL205-C, LTB Lasertechnik Berlin, Germany, , pulse width, repetition rate) was used for autofluorescence excitation. The energy at the fiber tip was adjusted to /pulse by the adjustment of the iris in the fiber coupling port. The other major components of the optical system include a monochromator (MC; MicroHR, Horiba Jobin Yvon, Edison, New Jersey) for emission wavelength selection, a multichannel photomultiplier tube (MCP-PMT; R5916U-50, Hamamatsu, Bridgewater, New Jersey), a wideband amplifier (C-5594-12, bandwidth, Hamamatsu), and a fast digitizer (DPO 7254, bandwidth, , Tektronix, Richardson, Texas) with workstation. The single-fiber approach for TRFS data collection/analysis has been validated using fluorescence standard dyes and tissue endogenous fluorophores (elastin and collagen). The IVUS imaging catheter used is a 3-Fr mechanical rotating type (SR Pro BSC, Fremont, California) catheter, which operates in the range with its ClearViewUltra (BSC) imaging system. The prototype MMC device has three major components, which are assembled in parallel combination to perform image-guided TRFS, as shown in cross section in Figs. 1 and 2 . The -diam IVUS catheter is the largest component. The side-viewing optical fiber (SVOF) is assembled inside a -diam water flushing lumen; it occupies the position of the IVUS monorail guide wire and, in this prototype design, is adhesively fixed in position at the distal end of the IVUS catheter. The third component is the steering wire (SW) which is housed in its own outboard lumen adhesively attached to the IVUS shaft. An operator push of the SW serves to move the MMC laterally (Fig. 2) toward the luminal wall site of interest. As shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the SVOF is rotated and adhesively positioned so that its optical mirror is directing light out of the fiber in a path at approximately to the IVUS-SVOF axis. This allows the IVUS catheter to directly view the lumen wall target for TRFS investigation and also permits the mounting of the steering wire on the contralateral side of the beam, which allows more compact catheter assembly and permits more effective wire side-steering. A -diam push-activated steering wire (SW; Fig. 2) is used to laterally direct the combination catheter to the wall; the proximal wire is confined in a small polyimide tube, which is adhesively fixed to the IVUS sheath. The small ( diameter) fluid (saline) flushing tube surrounds the SVOF, except for a small saline exit window at the side-viewing optical beam path, to allow a local, low-volume water flush to achieve a large reduction in blood attenuation and scattering of the optical beam positioned close to the arterial wall. Arterial phantoms made of polymethyl-methacrylate (PMMA) with wall-mounted fluorophore targets and ex vivo pig arteries were used to establish MMC performance metrics in a custom tank testing apparatus. The optical beam width of the SVOF fundamentally determines the lower limit for optical spatial precision. The SVOF beam, exiting at to the MMC length axis, was measured to be (FWHM) at a distance of from the fiber surface. Based on experimental data, the spatial convolution of the SVOF beam in water and a standard fluorophore phantom were determined as a spatial reference standard to permit the subsequent coregistration accuracy of the MMC in an arterial phantom with the fluorophore mounted on the inside wall of the phantom. Fifteen measurements using only IVUS guidance produced a spatial positioning accuracy of the SVOF beam of . An examination of the MMC performance in flowing whole blood conditions to assess (1) IVUS image guidance within either the phantom artery with a fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) fluorophore wall target or the pig femoral artery and (2) subsequent fluorescence spectroscopy was conducted in the following way. The arterial segment is mounted in the tank apparatus and blood introduced into the circulation system reservoir. The MMC catheter is then introduced through a hemostasis valve and advanced until the desired intraluminal wall position is in view with IVUS; the catheter is then rotated as needed to obtain the correct position (as shown in Figs. 1 and 2). The SW is then deployed to laterally shift the catheter for the optimal placement of the SVOF. With continuous low-volume saline flushing in the SVOF lumen, sample acquisitions of the intensity of fluorescence emission ( for arterial data, for FITC) are collected to gain feedback on good positioning. If the position yields a good fluorescence reading, the flushing is continued while the emission pulse transients across the entire fluorophore emission spectrum ( , interval) are recorded by the fast digitizing oscilloscope. The discrete spectral intensities were reconstructed by integrating each pulse as a function of time. A pig femoral artery was used to test the effectiveness of saline flushing to diminish the optical attenuation effect of blood at 45% hematocrit. Using only IVUS for positional guidance, a calibration set of the TRFS data was collected first in water , followed by TRFS data collections with multiple catheter withdrawal and repositioning steps in bovine blood . The blood was circulated within the artery in a retrograde path with respect to the catheter direction at . Saline flushing at was continuously performed during the TRFS emission data collection across the emission spectrum at the rate of /wavelength (Fig. 3 ). We noted that the TRFS spectral intensity was modulated by the peak (at ) in the blood absorbance, but the time-resolved data (average lifetime values) were not affected. As anticipated, this demonstrates that fluorescence lifetime measurements are more robust than intensity measurements in the presence of the endogenous absorbers such as blood. A fast TRFS system, which has been fully tested and recently reported,12 will be used in the future to obtain the data from arteries in less than . This prototype MMC design demonstrates the feasibility of the IVUS guided approach for intravascular TRFS and provides the means for future studies in vivo in animal models of the effects of drug therapies on the atherosclerotic plaque composition. The next generation design will further integrate the optical fiber into the IVUS construction as a smaller, more flexible, and multifunction catheter with a size of . AcknowledgmentsThe authors gratefully acknowledge Tat-Jin Teo at Boston Scientific Corp. for his cooperation and help with experimental materials. This work was supported in part by the NIH Grant No. R01 HL 067377 and the Philip Morris (USA and International) External Research Grant No. 07004732. ReferencesY. Honda and P. J. Fitzgerald,
“Frontiers in intravascular imaging technologies,”
Circulation, 117
(15), 2024
–2037
(2008). https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.551804 0009-7322 Google Scholar
L. Marcu, Q. Y. Fang, J. A. Jo, T. Papaioannou, A. Dorafshar, T. Reil, J. Qiao, J. D. Baker, J. A. Freischlag, and M. C. Fishbein,
“In vivo detection of macrophages in a rabbit atherosclerotic model by time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy,”
Atherosclerosis, 181
(2), 295
–303
(2005). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2005.02.010 0021-9150 Google Scholar
L. Marcu, J. A. Jo, Q. Y. Fang, T. Papaioannou, T. Reil, J. Qiao, J. D. Baker, J. A. Freischlag, and M. C. Fishbein,
“Detection of rupture-prone atherosclerotic plaques by time-resolved laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy,”
Atherosclerosis, 204
(1), 156
–164
(2009). 0021-9150 Google Scholar
H. Yabushita, B. E. Bouma, S. L. Houser, H. T. Aretz, I. K. Jang, K. H. Schlendorf, C. R. Kauffman, M. Shishkov, D. H. Kang, E. F. Halpern, and G. J. Tearney,
“Characterization of human atherosclerosis by optical coherence tomography,”
Circulation, 106
(13), 1640
–1645
(2002). https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000029927.92825.F6 0009-7322 Google Scholar
J. T. Motz, M. Fitzmaurice, A. Miller, S. J. Gandhi, A. S. Haka, L. H. Galindo, R. R. Dasari, J. R. Kramer, and M. S. Feld,
“In vivo Raman spectral pathology of human atherosclerosis and vulnerable plaque,”
J. Biomed. Opt., 11
(2), 021003
–1
(2006). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.2190967 1083-3668 Google Scholar
P. R. Moreno, R. A. Lodder, K. R. Purushothaman, W. E. Charash, W. N. O'Connor, and J. E. Muller,
“Detection of lipid pool, thin fibrous cap, and inflammatory cells in human aortic atherosclerotic plaques by near-infrared spectroscopy,”
Circulation, 105
(8), 923
–927
(2002). https://doi.org/10.1161/hc0802.104291 0009-7322 Google Scholar
G. J. Tearney, S. A. Boppart, B. E. Bouma, M. E. Brezinski, N. J. Weissman, J. F. Southern, and J. G. Fujimoto,
“Scanning single-mode fiber optic catheter-endoscope for optical coherence tomography,”
Opt. Lett., 21
(7), 543
–545
(1996). https://doi.org/10.1364/OL.21.000912 0146-9592 Google Scholar
Y. Komachi, H. Sato, K. Aizawa, and H. Tashiro,
“Micro-optical fiber probe for use in an intravascular Raman endoscope,”
Appl. Opt., 44
(22), 4722
–4732
(2005). https://doi.org/10.1364/AO.44.004722 0003-6935 Google Scholar
S. Waxman, F. Ishibashi, and J. D. Caplan,
“Rationale and use of near-infrared spectroscopy for detection of lipid-rich and vulnerable plaques,”
J. Nucl. Cardiol., 14
(5), 719
–728
(2007). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nuclcard.2007.08.001 1071-3581 Google Scholar
S. Waxman, F. Ishibashi, and J. E. Muller,
“Detection and treatment of vulnerable plaques and vulnerable patients—novel approaches to prevention of coronary events,”
Circulation, 114
(22), 2390
–2411
(2006). https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.540013 0009-7322 Google Scholar
Q. Y. Fang, T. Papaioannou, J. A. Jo, R. Vaitha, K. Shastry, and L. Marcu,
“Time-domain laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy apparatus for clinical diagnostics,”
Rev. Sci. Instrum., 75
(1), 151
–162
(2004). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1634354 0034-6748 Google Scholar
Y. Sun, R. Liu, D. S. Elson, C. W. Hollars, J. A. Jo, J. Park, Y. Sun, and L. Marcu,
“Simultaneous time- and wavelength-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy for near real-time tissue diagnosis,”
Opt. Lett., 33
(6), 630
–632
(2008). https://doi.org/10.1364/OL.33.000630 0146-9592 Google Scholar
|