This proposal aims to address the unmet clinical need for intraoperative assessment of blood and lymphatic vasculature to reduce the prevalence of two breast cancer-related morbidities: lymphedema and tissue necrosis. Current imaging systems are cumbersome, requiring ambient room lights to be turned off, have poor fluorescence sensitivity, or provide images that are difficult to interpret. OnLume will develop the clinical cart- based Asimov Imaging Platform to work in combination with the FDA-approved fluorescent dye, indocyanine green, that not only enables real-time image capture of small vessels with ambient lights on without degradation to image contrast, but also is easy for surgeons to use and interpret resulting in a platform that will be optimized to provide clinical value across multiple procedures in the breast cancer surgery workflow. More than 250,000 women a year undergo surgery for breast cancer in the United States. Conventionally, surgeons rely on white light reflectance as a guide to assessing vessel patency, which is extremely difficult to visualize. Lymphedema, an incurable disease associated with damage to lymphatic vessels, may occur in up to 40% of breast cancer survivors; associated symptoms include pain, heaviness and limitations in motility and associated costs range from $3000 to $16,000 per annum. Resection of lymph nodes that drain from the breast while sparing the lymphatic channels may decrease the risk of lymphedema. Some women who undergo mastectomy may choose breast reconstruction with a free flap surgery, where plastic surgeons reattach blood vessels between donor and recipient tissue sites to reconstruct a breast mound. Surgeons must assess vessel patency to decrease the risk of tissue necrosis and secondary operations. In 15-25% of cases, patients undergo secondary surgery to correct tissue necrosis, incurring costs that can exceed $14,000 per procedure. Our novel imaging system will be evaluated in a pilot study to measure the efficacy of the visualization of the blood and lymphatic architecture. This Phase II proposal has three specific aims: (1) complete development and integration of novel technology into a clinical transient lighting-enabled, wide-field fluorescence-guided surgery cart-based imaging platform, (2) demonstrate enhanced contrast of lymphatics for axillary reverse mapping (ARM), and (3) evaluate blood vessel patency in free flap breast reconstruction. Successful completion will result in a commercially available clinical wide-field FGS imaging system, providing critical intraoperative imaging that could enable breast surgeons and plastic surgeons to improve the health and quality of life for breast cancer survivors.

Public Health Relevance

This proposal aims to address the unmet clinical need for intraoperative assessment to reduce the risk of two breast cancer-related morbidities, lymphedema and tissue necrosis, by enabling breast surgeons to see these small lymphatic and blood vessels. OnLume?s Asimov Imaging Platform enables surgeons to perform fluorescence-guided surgery to avoid damaging these vessels and check to see how well they are repaired. This critical intraoperative imaging device could improve the health and quality of life for breast cancer survivors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase II (R44)
Project #
2R44CA206754-02A1
Application #
10082058
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Narayanan, Deepa
Project Start
2016-07-21
Project End
2022-08-31
Budget Start
2020-09-01
Budget End
2021-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Onlume, LLC
Department
Type
DUNS #
969703326
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53714