Mouse models are essential tools for understanding cancer growth and accelerating the development of therapeutic and
diagnostic technologies. Xenografts, generated by implanting tumor cells directly into mice through injection, are
frequently used to study cancer biology and therapeutics. In these models, assessment of tumor growth and development
is necessary to support the study of disease progression and model validation. Unfortunately, such measurements often
require sacrificing the animal to create organ explants or tissue cultures, resulting in increased animal use and hampering
longitudinal measurements of individual tumors. A tool enabling in vivo tumor monitoring for xenograft models could
improve the efficiency of these animal models and provide more robust growth measurements through true longitudinal
measurement.
One method of optical tumor assessment involves tagging biomolecules of interest with fluorescent species to enable
detection with minimally invasive fluorescence imaging, implemented endoscopically or laparoscopically. However,
utilizing fluorescence imaging in vivo in murine models poses challenges due to both tortuous anatomy and small
gastrointestinal lumen caliber.
This work reports a miniature fluorescence imaging probe equipped with a multiband filter and biopsy device to image
and sample fluorescently-tagged, xenografted tumors as they develop in mouse models. We present the design and
characterization of the device and report measurements of the modulation transfer function and ex vivo imaging
performance, demonstrating its promise as a valuable research tool to advance cancer research in xenograft models,
enabling the development of imaging biomarkers for cancer detection in a clinical setting without the need for
exogenous contrast.