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Reviews on Recent Clinical Trials

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1574-8871
ISSN (Online): 1876-1038

Optical Diagnosis of Head and Neck Cancers (Review)

Author(s): Zhi Wang and Lining Feng

Volume 11, Issue 1, 2016

Page: [2 - 11] Pages: 10

DOI: 10.2174/1574887110666150916142703

Price: $65

Abstract

Head and neck cancer is one of the most common malignancies. Currently, it has a poor prognosis and significant mortality as the majority of malignancies present in later stages. Early diagnosis affords early intervention and the best chance of cure. However, the current gold standard for diagnosis largely depends on histopathology via an invasive procedure, tissue biopsy. The processing of biopsy material also inevitably leads to diagnostic delay and the possibility of taking an unrepresentative sample. Recently, there has been significantly increasing interest in the use of spectroscopy (e.g., fluorescence, elastic scattering, and Raman spectroscopy) and other optical systems to provide an early, real-time, non-invasive, and in situ diagnosis. Such diagnosis is based on the fact that the optical spectrum derived from any tissue reveals information about the histological and biochemical characteristics of that tissue. These optical systems have not only a role in cancer detection but also in treatment through guided biopsy, surgical margin assessment, and the monitoring of therapeutic drugs. However, our literature search is limited only to clinical diagnosis and only to the clinical trials published within recent 15 years (in 2000-2014). In this review, we will discuss and summarize the progress and new findings from recent clinical trials using these optical systems in the diagnosis of head and neck cancer.

Keywords: Cancer, detect, diagnosis, dysplasia, head and neck, optical, oral, and spectroscopy.

Graphical Abstract


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