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Dive into the research topics where Lucas Cahill is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucas Cahill.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2014

A high-efficiency fiber-based imaging system for co-registered autofluorescence and optical coherence tomography

Hamid Pahlevaninezhad; Anthony M. D. Lee; Tawimas Shaipanich; Rashika Raizada; Lucas Cahill; Geoffrey Hohert; Victor X. D. Yang; Stephen Lam; Calum MacAulay; Pierre Lane

We present a power-efficient fiber-based imaging system capable of co-registered autofluorescence imaging and optical coherence tomography (AF/OCT). The system employs a custom fiber optic rotary joint (FORJ) with an embedded dichroic mirror to efficiently combine the OCT and AF pathways. This three-port wavelength multiplexing FORJ setup has a throughput of more than 83% for collected AF emission, significantly more efficient compared to previously reported fiber-based methods. A custom 900 µm diameter catheter ‒ consisting of a rotating lens assembly, double-clad fiber (DCF), and torque cable in a stationary plastic tube ‒ was fabricated to allow AF/OCT imaging of small airways in vivo. We demonstrate the performance of this system ex vivo in resected porcine airway specimens and in vivo in human on fingers, in the oral cavity, and in peripheral airways.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2015

Wide-field in vivo oral OCT imaging.

Anthony M. D. Lee; Lucas Cahill; Kelly Y. P. Liu; Calum MacAulay; Catherine F. Poh; Pierre Lane

We have built a polarization-sensitive swept source Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) instrument capable of wide-field in vivo imaging in the oral cavity. This instrument uses a hand-held side-looking fiber-optic rotary pullback catheter that can cover two dimensional tissue imaging fields approximately 2.5 mm wide by up to 90 mm length in a single image acquisition. The catheter spins at 100 Hz with pullback speeds up to 15 mm/s allowing imaging of areas up to 225 mm(2) field-of-view in seconds. A catheter sheath and two optional catheter sheath holders have been designed to allow imaging at all locations within the oral cavity. Image quality of 2-dimensional image slices through the data can be greatly enhanced by averaging over the orthogonal dimension to reduce speckle. Initial in vivo imaging results reveal a wide-field view of features such as epithelial thickness and continuity of the basement membrane that may be useful in clinic for chair-side management of oral lesions.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2016

Direct comparison between confocal and multiphoton microscopy for rapid histopathological evaluation of unfixed human breast tissue.

Tadayuki Yoshitake; Michael G. Giacomelli; Lucas Cahill; Daniel Schmolze; Hilde Vardeh; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; James L. Connolly; James G. Fujimoto

Abstract. Rapid histopathological examination of surgical specimen margins using fluorescence microscopy during breast conservation therapy has the potential to reduce the rate of positive margins on postoperative histopathology and the need for repeat surgeries. To assess the suitability of imaging modalities, we perform a direct comparison between confocal fluorescence microscopy and multiphoton microscopy for imaging unfixed tissue and compare to paraffin-embedded histology. An imaging protocol including dual channel detection of two contrast agents to implement virtual hematoxylin and eosin images is introduced that provides high quality imaging under both one and two photon excitation. Corresponding images of unfixed human breast tissue show that both confocal and multiphoton microscopy can reproduce the appearance of conventional histology without the need for physical sectioning. We further compare normal breast tissue and invasive cancer specimens imaged at multiple magnifications, and assess the effects of photobleaching for both modalities using the staining protocol. The results demonstrate that confocal fluorescence microscopy is a promising and cost-effective alternative to multiphoton microscopy for rapid histopathological evaluation of ex vivo breast tissue.


Laboratory Investigation | 2018

Rapid virtual hematoxylin and eosin histology of breast tissue specimens using a compact fluorescence nonlinear microscope

Lucas Cahill; Michael G. Giacomelli; Tadayuki Yoshitake; Hilde Vardeh; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; James L. Connolly; Chi-Kuang Sun; James G. Fujimoto

Up to 40% of patients undergoing breast conserving surgery for breast cancer require repeat surgeries due to close to or positive margins. The lengthy processing required for evaluating surgical margins by standard paraffin-embedded histology precludes its use during surgery and therefore, technologies for rapid evaluation of surgical pathology could improve the treatment of breast cancer by reducing the number of surgeries required. We demonstrate real-time histological evaluation of breast cancer surgical specimens by staining specimens with acridine orange (AO) and sulforhodamine 101 (SR101) analogously to hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and then imaging the specimens with fluorescence nonlinear microscopy (NLM) using a compact femtosecond fiber laser. A video-rate computational light absorption model was used to produce realistic virtual H&E images of tissue in real time and in three dimensions. NLM imaging could be performed to depths of 100 μm below the tissue surface, which is important since many surgical specimens require subsurface evaluation due to contamination artifacts on the tissue surface from electrocautery, surgical ink, or debris from specimen handling. We validate this method by expert review of NLM images compared to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) H&E histology. Diagnostically important features such as normal terminal ductal lobular units, fibrous and adipose stromal parenchyma, inflammation, invasive carcinoma, and in situ lobular and ductal carcinoma were present in NLM images associated with pathologies identified on standard FFPE H&E histology. We demonstrate that AO and SR101 were extracted to undetectable levels after FFPE processing and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) HER2 amplification status was unaffected by the NLM imaging protocol. This method potentially enables cost-effective, real-time histological guidance of surgical resections.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Rapid histopathological imaging of skin and breast cancer surgical specimens using immersion microscopy with ultraviolet surface excitation

Tadayuki Yoshitake; Michael G. Giacomelli; Liza M. Quintana; Hilde Vardeh; Lucas Cahill; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; James L. Connolly; Daihung Do; James G. Fujimoto

Rapid histopathological evaluation of fresh, unfixed human tissue using optical sectioning microscopy would have applications to intraoperative surgical margin assessment. Microscopy with ultraviolet surface excitation (MUSE) is a low-cost optical sectioning technique using ultraviolet illumination which limits fluorescence excitation to the specimen surface. In this paper, we characterize MUSE using high incident angle, water immersion illumination to improve sectioning. Propidium iodide is used as a nuclear stain and eosin yellow as a counterstain. Histologic features of specimens using MUSE, nonlinear microscopy (NLM) and conventional hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) histology were evaluated by pathologists to assess potential application in Mohs surgery for skin cancer and lumpectomy for breast cancer. MUSE images of basal cell carcinoma showed high correspondence with frozen section H&E histology, suggesting that MUSE may be applicable to Mohs surgery. However, correspondence in breast tissue between MUSE and paraffin embedded H&E histology was limited due to the thicker optical sectioning in MUSE, suggesting that further development is needed for breast surgical applications. We further demonstrate that the transverse image resolution of MUSE is limited by the optical sectioning thickness and use co-registered NLM to quantify the improvement in MUSE optical sectioning from high incident angle water immersion illumination.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2018

Multiscale nonlinear microscopy and widefield white light imaging enables rapid histological imaging of surgical specimen margins

Michael G. Giacomelli; Tadayuki Yoshitake; Lucas Cahill; Hilde Vardeh; Liza M. Quintana; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; Jeff Brooker; James L. Connolly; James G. Fujimoto

The ability to histologically assess surgical specimens in real-time is a long-standing challenge in cancer surgery, including applications such as breast conserving therapy (BCT). Up to 40% of women treated with BCT for breast cancer require a repeat surgery due to postoperative histological findings of close or positive surgical margins using conventional formalin fixed paraffin embedded histology. Imaging technologies such as nonlinear microscopy (NLM), combined with exogenous fluorophores can rapidly provide virtual H&E imaging of surgical specimens without requiring microtome sectioning, facilitating intraoperative assessment of margin status. However, the large volume of typical surgical excisions combined with the need for rapid assessment, make comprehensive cellular resolution margin assessment during surgery challenging. To address this limitation, we developed a multiscale, real-time microscope with variable magnification NLM and real-time, co-registered position display using a widefield white light imaging system. Margin assessment can be performed rapidly under operator guidance to image specific regions of interest located using widefield imaging. Using simulated surgical margins dissected from human breast excisions, we demonstrate that multi-centimeter margins can be comprehensively imaged at cellular resolution, enabling intraoperative margin assessment. These methods are consistent with pathology assessment performed using frozen section analysis (FSA), however NLM enables faster and more comprehensive assessment of surgical specimens because imaging can be performed without freezing and cryo-sectioning. Therefore, NLM methods have the potential to be applied to a wide range of intra-operative applications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Design of a portable wide field of view GPU-accelerated multiphoton imaging system for real-time imaging of breast surgical specimens

Michael G. Giacomelli; Tadayuki Yoshitake; Lennart Husvogt; Lucas Cahill; Osman O. Ahsen; Hilde Vardeh; Yury Sheykin; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; Joachim Hornegger; Jeff Brooker; Alex Cable; James L. Connolly; James G. Fujimoto

We present a portable multiphoton system designed for evaluating centimeter-scale surgical margins on surgical breast specimens in a clinical setting. The system is designed to produce large field of view images at a high frame rate, while using GPU processing to render low latency, video-rate virtual H&E images for real-time assessment. The imaging system and virtual H&E rendering algorithm are demonstrated by imaging unfixed human breast tissue in a clinical setting.


Photonics | 2014

Fiber-Based Polarization Diversity Detection for Polarization-Sensitive Optical Coherence Tomography

Hamid Pahlevaninezhad; Anthony M. D. Lee; Lucas Cahill; Stephen Lam; Calum MacAulay; Pierre Lane


SPIE | 2016

Design of a portable, wide field of view, GPU-accelerated multiphoton imaging system for real-time imaging of breast surgical specimens

Lennart Husvogt; Hilde Vardeh; Yury Sheykin; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; Joachim Hornegger; Jeff Brooker; Alex Cable; James L. Connolly; Michael G. Giacomelli; Tadayuki Yoshitake; Lucas Cahill; Osman O. Ahsen; James G. Fujimoto


Biophotonics Congress: Biomedical Optics Congress 2018 (Microscopy/Translational/Brain/OTS) | 2018

Multiphoton Imaging of Surgical Pathology

Michael G. Giacomelli; Tadayuki Yoshitake; Lucas Cahill; Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones; James L. Connolly; Daihung Do; James G. Fujimoto

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Beverly E. Faulkner-Jones

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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James G. Fujimoto

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James L. Connolly

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Michael G. Giacomelli

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tadayuki Yoshitake

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Pierre Lane

University of British Columbia

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