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Dive into the research topics where Molly Flexman is active.

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Featured researches published by Molly Flexman.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2011

Digital optical tomography system for dynamic breast imaging

Molly Flexman; Michael A. Khalil; Rabah M. Al abdi; Hyun Keol Kim; Christopher J. Fong; Elise Desperito; Dawn L. Hershman; Randall L. Barbour; Andreas H. Hielscher

Diffuse optical tomography has shown promising results as a tool for breast cancer screening and monitoring response to chemotherapy. Dynamic imaging of the transient response of the breast to an external stimulus, such as pressure or a respiratory maneuver, can provide additional information that can be used to detect tumors. We present a new digital continuous-wave optical tomography system designed to simultaneously image both breasts at fast frame rates and with a large number of sources and detectors. The system uses a master-slave digital signal processor-based detection architecture to achieve a dynamic range of 160 dB and a frame rate of 1.7 Hz with 32 sources, 64 detectors, and 4 wavelengths per breast. Included is a preliminary study of one healthy patient and two breast cancer patients showing the ability to identify an invasive carcinoma based on the hemodynamic response to a breath hold.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2010

PDE-constrained multispectral imaging of tissue chromophores with the equation of radiative transfer.

Hyun Keol Kim; Molly Flexman; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Jessica J. Kandel; Andreas H. Hielscher

We introduce a transport-theory-based PDE-constrained multispectral model for direct imaging of the spatial distributions of chromophores concentrations in biological tissue. The method solves the forward problem (boundary radiance at each wavelength) and the inverse problem (spatial distribution of chromophores concentrations), in an all-at-once manner in the framework of a reduced Hessian sequential quadratic programming method. To illustrate the code’s performance, we present numerical and experimental studies involving tumor bearing mice. It is shown that the PDE-constrained multispectral method accelerates the reconstruction process by up to 15 times compared to unconstrained reconstruction algorithms and provides more accurate results as compared to the so-called two-step approach to multi-wavelength imaging.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2012

Contrast Ultrasound Imaging for Identification of Early Responder Tumor Models to Anti-Angiogenic Therapy

Shashank R. Sirsi; Molly Flexman; Fotois Vlachos; Jianzhong Huang; Sonia L. Hernandez; Hyun Keol Kim; Tessa Johung; Jeffrey W. Gander; Ari R. Reichstein; Brooke S. Lampl; Antai Wang; Andreas H. Hielscher; Jessica J. Kandel; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Mark A. Borden

Agents targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) have been validated as cancer therapeutics, yet efficacy can differ widely between tumor types and individual patients. In addition, such agents are costly and can have significant toxicities. Rapid noninvasive determination of response could provide significant benefits. We tested if response to the anti-VEGF antibody bevacizumab (BV) could be detected using contrast-enhanced ultrasound imaging (CEUS). We used two xenograft model systems with previously well-characterized responses to VEGF inhibition, a responder (SK-NEP-1) and a non-responder (NGP), and examined perfusion-related parameters. CEUS demonstrated that BV treatment arrested the increase in blood volume in the SK-NEP-1 tumor group only. Molecular imaging of α(V)β(3) with targeted microbubbles was a more sensitive prognostic indicator of BV efficacy. CEUS using RGD-labeled microbubbles showed a robust decrease in α(V)β(3) vasculature following BV treatment in SK-NEP-1 tumors. Paralleling these findings, lectin perfusion assays detected a disproportionate pruning of smaller, branch vessels. Therefore, we conclude that the response to BV can be identified soon after initiation of treatment, often within 3 days, by use of CEUS molecular imaging techniques. The use of a noninvasive ultrasound approach may allow for earlier and more effective determination of efficacy of antiangiogenic therapy.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2013

Optical biomarkers for breast cancer derived from dynamic diffuse optical tomography

Molly Flexman; Hyun Keol Kim; Jacqueline Gunther; Emerson Lim; Maria C. Alvarez; Elise Desperito; Kevin Kalinsky; Dawn L. Hershman; Andreas H. Hielscher

Abstract. Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) is a noninvasive, nonionizing imaging modality that uses near-infrared light to visualize optically relevant chromophores. A recently developed dynamic DOT imaging system enables the study of hemodynamic effects in the breast during a breath-hold. Dynamic DOT imaging was performed in a total of 21 subjects (age 54±10  years) including 3 healthy subjects and 18 subjects with benign (n=8) and malignant (n=14) masses. Three-dimensional time-series images of the percentage change in oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin concentrations ([HbO2] and [Hb]) from baseline are obtained over the course of a breath-hold. At a time point of 15 s following the end of the breath-hold, [Hb] in healthy breasts has returned to near-baseline values (1.6%±0.5%), while tumor-bearing breasts have increased levels of [Hb] (6.8%±3.6%, p<0.01). Further, healthy subjects have a higher correlation between the breasts over the course of the breath-hold as compared with the subjects with breast cancer (healthy: 0.96±0.02; benign: 0.89±0.02; malignant: 0.78±0.23, p<0.05). Therefore this study shows that dynamic features extracted from DOT measurements can differentiate healthy and diseased breast tissues. These features provide a physiologic method for identifying breast cancer without the need for ionizing radiation.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2012

Dynamic diffuse optical tomography imaging of peripheral arterial disease.

Michael A. Khalil; Hyun Keol Kim; In-Kyong Kim; Molly Flexman; Rajeev Dayal; Gautam V. Shrikhande; Andreas H. Hielscher

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is the narrowing of arteries due to plaque accumulation in the vascular walls. This leads to insufficient blood supply to the extremities and can ultimately cause cell death. Currently available methods are ineffective in diagnosing PAD in patients with calcified arteries, such as those with diabetes. In this paper we investigate the potential of dynamic diffuse optical tomography (DDOT) as an alternative way to assess PAD in the lower extremities. DDOT is a non-invasive, non-ionizing imaging modality that uses near-infrared light to create spatio-temporal maps of oxy- and deoxy-hemoglobin in tissue. We present three case studies in which we used DDOT to visualize vascular perfusion of a healthy volunteer, a PAD patient and a diabetic PAD patient with calcified arteries. These preliminary results show significant differences in DDOT time-traces and images between all three cases, underscoring the potential of DDOT as a new diagnostic tool.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

A wireless handheld probe with spectrally constrained evolution strategies for diffuse optical imaging of tissue

Molly Flexman; Hyun Keol Kim; R. Stoll; Michael A. Khalil; Christopher J. Fong; Andreas H. Hielscher

We present a low-cost, portable, wireless diffuse optical imaging device. The handheld device is fast, portable, and can be applied to a wide range of both static and dynamic imaging applications including breast cancer, functional brain imaging, and peripheral artery disease. The continuous-wave probe has four near-infrared wavelengths and uses digital detection techniques to perform measurements at 2.3 Hz. Using a multispectral evolution algorithm for chromophore reconstruction, we can measure absolute oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin concentration as well as scattering in tissue. Performance of the device is demonstrated using a series of liquid phantoms comprised of Intralipid(®), ink, and dye.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2012

Monitoring early tumor response to drug therapy with diffuse optical tomography

Molly Flexman; Fotios Vlachos; Hyun Keol Kim; Shashank R. Sirsi; Jianzhong Huang; Sonia L. Hernandez; Tessa Johung; Jeffrey W. Gander; Ari R. Reichstein; Brooke S. Lampl; Antai Wang; Mark A. Borden; Darrell J. Yamashiro; Jessica J. Kandel; Andreas H. Hielscher

Although anti-angiogenic agents have shown promise as cancer therapeutics, their efficacy varies between tumor types and individual patients. Providing patient-specific metrics through rapid noninvasive imaging can help tailor drug treatment by optimizing dosages, timing of drug cycles, and duration of therapy-thereby reducing toxicity and cost and improving patient outcome. Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) is a noninvasive three-dimensional imaging modality that has been shown to capture physiologic changes in tumors through visualization of oxygenated, deoxygenated, and total hemoglobin concentrations, using non-ionizing radiation with near-infrared light. We employed a small animal model to ascertain if tumor response to bevacizumab (BV), an anti-angiogenic agent that targets vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), could be detected at early time points using DOT. We detected a significant decrease in total hemoglobin levels as soon as one day after BV treatment in responder xenograft tumors (SK-NEP-1), but not in SK-NEP-1 control tumors or in non-responder control or BV-treated NGP tumors. These results are confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging T2 relaxometry and lectin perfusion studies. Noninvasive DOT imaging may allow for earlier and more effective control of anti-angiogenic therapy.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2008

The design and characterization of a digital optical breast cancer imaging system

Molly Flexman; Yang Li; Andres M. Bur; Christopher J. Fong; James M. Masciotti; Rabah M. Al abdi; Randall L. Barbour; Andreas H. Hielscher

Optical imaging has the potential to play a major role in breast cancer screening and diagnosis due to its ability to image cancer characteristics such as angiogenesis and hypoxia. A promising approach to evaluate and quantify these characteristics is to perform dynamic imaging studies in which one monitors the hemodynamic response to an external stimulus, such as a valsalva maneuver. It has been shown that the response to such stimuli shows MARKED differences between cancerous and healthy tissues. The fast imaging rates and large dynamic range of digital devices makes them ideal for this type of imaging studies. Here we present a digital optical tomography system designed specifically for dynamic breast imaging. The instrument uses laser diodes at 4 different near-infrared wavelengths with 32 sources and 128 silicon photodiode detectors.


European Conference on Biomedical Optics | 2015

Combined dynamic and static optical tomography for prediction of treatment outcome in breast cancer patients

Jacqueline Gunther; Emerson Lim; Hyun Keol Kim; Molly Flexman; Lukas Zweck; Sindhiya Arora; Susan Refice; Mindy Brown; Kevin Kalinsky; Dawn L. Hershman; Andreas H. Hielscher

We explored evidence that a combination of dynamic and static diffuse optical tomography can be used to predict treatment response in patients undergoing neo adjuvant chemotherapy. Both blood chromophore concentrations and hemodynamic signatures were measured over the 5-month course of treatment.


northeast bioengineering conference | 2010

Measuring peripheral vascular reactivity with diffusive optical imaging

Michael A. Khalil; Molly Flexman; Joseph Youssef; Ritu Aparajita; In-Kyong Kim; Rajeev Dayal; Andreas H. Hielscher

Diffuse optical imaging of the peripheral vascular reactivity is implemented at the major arteries of the foot. Transmitted light intensities are recorded in response to vascular occlusions induced by pressure cuffs. These dynamic measurements promise to help identify various peripheral vascular diseases.

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Dawn L. Hershman

Columbia University Medical Center

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Kevin Kalinsky

Columbia University Medical Center

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