A team of researchers have found that STOC tomography enables unprecedented views of eye structure.
A team of scientists in Poland has achieved another milestone in eye imaging, developing a technique that enables visualization of the retina and choroid at discrete depths.
Today’s imaging of eye tissues would not be possible without the use of optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans, which are one of the most popular and accurate diagnostic techniques. This technology enables ophthalmologists to understand more fully the mechanisms of many diseases of the eye and to select therapies more effectively. However, OCT is not a perfect technique. Coherent noise and/or limited axial range have prevented high-resolution imaging, as well as precluding full penetration of all layers of the retina and choroid.
According to an Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences (IPCPAS) news release, researchers at the International Centre for Translational Eye Research (ICTER) found a way around these limitations and developed spatio-temporal optical coherence tomography (STOC-T). The latest research1 by the team led by Maciej Wojtkowski, PhD, confirms that this method makes it possible now to view the retina and choroid with high resolution at distinct depths in the frontal section. No one in the world had succeeded previously.
The eye only sometimes reveals everything
IPCPAS noted in the news release that imaging technologies such as scanning laser ophthalmoscopy and angiography with fluorescein (AF) or indocyanine green (ICG) dyes have translated to more accurate treatment of many eye diseases, but OCT has remained as the gold standard of clinical care. It is painless and non-invasive, but its limitations (noted above) make it challenging to distinguish essential morphological elements of the eye.
According to the news release, OCT angiography (angio-OCT) makes it possible to visualize the microcirculation of the retina and choroid without injecting dyes, but the image quality still leaves much to be desired, and in many cases is not better than classic OCT. The imaging difficulty is exacerbated by the structural complexity of the choroid, as well as its functional diversity, including nourishing the outer layers of the retina.
The structure of the choroid is described as four layers: the Haller layer (the outermost layer, consisting of blood vessels of larger diameter); the Sattler layer (a layer of blood vessels of medium diameter); the choriocapillaris (a layer of capillaries); and Bruch's membrane (the deepest layer of the choroid). The choriocapillaris (CC), retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), and photoreceptor cells constitute a unified metabolic complex whose structural and functional integrity is crucial for visual function. Monitoring disruption of this tripart complex is essential for documenting retinal dysfunction, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy, uveitis, or other degenerative diseases of the retina.
The researchers noted that the best currently available (though imperfect) method for visualizing choroidal vessels is ICG angiography, which is time-restrictive, allowing vessel observation only for a short time after dye injection. ICG angiography, however, cannot distinguish the different layers of the choroid nor reveal the complexity of the CC, which can only be seen to a limited extent with angio-OCT; but angio-OCT also falls short. Thus, angio-OCT images obtained at different depths of the choroid have been shown to have a similar appearance, suggesting that they may contain other layers, including the Sattler layer. Overall, the inability to distinguish among the layers makes any quantitative analysis of vessel density pointless.
Look deeper
In a previous paper titled "Light-adapted flicker optoretinograms captured with a Spatio-Temporal Optical Coherence-Tomography (STOC-T) system," ICTER researchers described the Spatio-Temporal Optical Coherence Tomography (STOC-T) time-frequency OCT system they invented for capturing retinal optoretinograms.
Now, Wojtkowski's team at ICTER, in a paper titled "Spatio-Temporal Optical Coherence Tomography Provides Full Thickness Imaging of the Chorioretinal Complex", has shown that retinal images obtained using STOC-T maintain a uniform resolution of ~ 5 μm in all three dimensions, across a thickness of about 800 μm. This, in turn, allows them to obtain high-contrast, volumetric images of the choriocapillaris with reduced scattering effects.
“We applied known data processing algorithms and developed new ones to handle and process the acquired data sets to obtain high-contrast 3D data (volumes) for the retina in large fields of view,” Wojtkowski said in the IPCPAS news release. “The technology and algorithms made it possible to image the retina and choroid at high transverse resolution at different depths, making the differentiation of morphology visible for the first time within the Sattler, Haller, and choriocapillaris layers."
According to the news release, the primary limitation for clinical application of this breakthrough technique is the current camera price, around $108,600 (100,000 euros). The ICTER scientists, according to the release, expect that as the volume of camera production increases, the cost would gradually drop, although it is difficult to predict to what level. Indeed, many research facilities need help to afford such an expensive tool.
Moreover, the news release noted that STOC tomography enables distinct imaging of all primary layers of the choroid while making difficult-to-image layers visible over a large transverse and axial range. The data can only be analyzed offline due to the low transmission speed between the camera and the computer. Considerable computer processing power is required to process all the vast amounts of data generated, but this can be reduced somewhat by using machine learning algorithms such as deep learning.
According to the news release, using STOC-T for retinal imaging makes it possible to reconstruct the morphology of the cones of the human eye in a non-invasive manner. Thanks to the camera above, the STOC-T method makes it possible to capture the retina in a fraction of a second and record its entire depth in extremely high, unprecedented resolution. In clinical practice, even before the patient has time to blink, his or her eye will already be fully imaged, with an accuracy that allows single cells to be viewed. STOC tomography has the potential to usher in a new era in the diagnosis of eye diseases, although much more practical refinement needs to be done before it can be routinely disseminated in the clinic.
Reference
1 Egidijus Auksorius, Dawid Borycki, Piotr Wegrzyn, Bartosz L. Sikorski, Kamil Lizewski, Ieva Zickiene, Mounika Rapolu, Karolis Adomavicius, Slawomir Tomczewski, Maciej Wojtkowski. Spatio-temporal optical coherence tomography provides full thickness imaging of the chorioretinal complex. iScience. Volume 25, Issue 12. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.105513.