PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Evaluation of non-invasive multispectral imaging as a tool for measuring the effect of systemic therapy in Kaposi sarcoma.

  • Jana M Kainerstorfer,
  • Mark N Polizzotto,
  • Thomas S Uldrick,
  • Rafa Rahman,
  • Moinuddin Hassan,
  • Laleh Najafizadeh,
  • Yasaman Ardeshirpour,
  • Kathleen M Wyvill,
  • Karen Aleman,
  • Paul D Smith,
  • Robert Yarchoan,
  • Amir H Gandjbakhche

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083887
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e83887

Abstract

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Diffuse multi-spectral imaging has been evaluated as a potential non-invasive marker of tumor response. Multi-spectral images of Kaposi sarcoma skin lesions were taken over the course of treatment, and blood volume and oxygenation concentration maps were obtained through principal component analysis (PCA) of the data. These images were compared with clinical and pathological responses determined by conventional means. We demonstrate that cutaneous lesions have increased blood volume concentration and that changes in this parameter are a reliable indicator of treatment efficacy, differentiating responders and non-responders. Blood volume decreased by at least 20% in all lesions that responded by clinical criteria and increased in the two lesions that did not respond clinically. Responses as assessed by multi-spectral imaging also generally correlated with overall patient clinical response assessment, were often detectable earlier in the course of therapy, and are less subject to observer variability than conventional clinical assessment. Tissue oxygenation was more variable, with lesions often showing decreased oxygenation in the center surrounded by a zone of increased oxygenation. This technique could potentially be a clinically useful supplement to existing response assessment in KS, providing an early, quantitative, and non-invasive marker of treatment effect.