Open Access
20 October 2021 Enhanced medical diagnosis for dOCTors: a perspective of optical coherence tomography
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Abstract

Significance: After three decades, more than 75,000 publications, tens of companies being involved in its commercialization, and a global market perspective of about USD 1.5 billion in 2023, optical coherence tomography (OCT) has become one of the fastest successfully translated imaging techniques with substantial clinical and economic impacts and acceptance.

Aim: Our perspective focuses on disruptive forward-looking innovations and key technologies to further boost OCT performance and therefore enable significantly enhanced medical diagnosis.

Approach: A comprehensive review of state-of-the-art accomplishments in OCT has been performed.

Results: The most disruptive future OCT innovations include imaging resolution and speed (single-beam raster scanning versus parallelization) improvement, new implementations for dual modality or even multimodality systems, and using endogenous or exogenous contrast in these hybrid OCT systems targeting molecular and metabolic imaging. Aside from OCT angiography, no other functional or contrast enhancing OCT extension has accomplished comparable clinical and commercial impacts. Some more recently developed extensions, e.g., optical coherence elastography, dynamic contrast OCT, optoretinography, and artificial intelligence enhanced OCT are also considered with high potential for the future. In addition, OCT miniaturization for portable, compact, handheld, and/or cost-effective capsule-based OCT applications, home-OCT, and self-OCT systems based on micro-optic assemblies or photonic integrated circuits will revolutionize new applications and availability in the near future. Finally, clinical translation of OCT including medical device regulatory challenges will continue to be absolutely essential.

Conclusions: With its exquisite non-invasive, micrometer resolution depth sectioning capability, OCT has especially revolutionized ophthalmic diagnosis and hence is the fastest adopted imaging technology in the history of ophthalmology. Nonetheless, OCT has not been completely exploited and has substantial growth potential—in academics as well as in industry. This applies not only to the ophthalmic application field, but also especially to the original motivation of OCT to enable optical biopsy, i.e., the in situ imaging of tissue microstructure with a resolution approaching that of histology but without the need for tissue excision.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Rainer A. Leitgeb, Fabian Placzek, Elisabet A. Rank, Lisa Krainz, Richard Haindl, Qian Li, Mengyang Liu, Mengyang Liu, Angelika Unterhuber, Tilman Schmoll, and Wolfgang Drexler "Enhanced medical diagnosis for dOCTors: a perspective of optical coherence tomography," Journal of Biomedical Optics 26(10), 100601 (20 October 2021). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.26.10.100601
Received: 2 June 2021; Accepted: 23 September 2021; Published: 20 October 2021
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CITATIONS
Cited by 34 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Optical coherence tomography

Imaging systems

Tissue optics

Tissues

Medical diagnostics

Image resolution

In vivo imaging

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