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Intraoperative Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy Detects Prostate Cancer at the Single-Cell Level with High Specificity and in Real Time: A Preclinical Proof of Concept.

Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) 2025 Vol.18(6)

Eder AC, Matthias J, Lacombe F, Domogalla LC, Jacques A, Steinacker N, Christien G, Martin E, Criton A, Eder M

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In prostate cancer (PCa) surgery, precise tumor margin identification remains challenging despite advances in surgical techniques.

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APA Eder AC, Matthias J, et al. (2025). Intraoperative Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy Detects Prostate Cancer at the Single-Cell Level with High Specificity and in Real Time: A Preclinical Proof of Concept.. Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland), 18(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/ph18060841
MLA Eder AC, et al.. "Intraoperative Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy Detects Prostate Cancer at the Single-Cell Level with High Specificity and in Real Time: A Preclinical Proof of Concept.." Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland), vol. 18, no. 6, 2025.
PMID 40573237
DOI 10.3390/ph18060841

Abstract

In prostate cancer (PCa) surgery, precise tumor margin identification remains challenging despite advances in surgical techniques. This study evaluates the combination of tumor-specific near-infrared imaging with the PSMA-targeting molecule PSMA-914 and optical endomicroscopy (NIR-pCLE) for single-cell-level tumor identification in a preclinical proof of concept. NIR-pCLE imaging of varying PSMA-914 concentrations was performed on PSMA-positive LNCaP and PSMA-negative PC-3 cells using Cellvizio 100 with pCLE Confocal Miniprobes™. To identify optimal PSMA-914 dosing for in vivo imaging, different doses (0-10 nmol) were evaluated using NIR-pCLE, Odyssey CLx imaging, and confocal microscopy in an LNCaP tumor-bearing xenograft model. A proof of concept mimicking a clinical workflow was performed using 5 nmol [Ga]Ga-PSMA-914 in LNCaP and PC-3 tumor xenografts, including PET/MRI, in/ex vivo NIR-pCLE imaging, and microscopic/macroscopic imaging. NIR-pCLE detected PSMA-specific fluorescence at concentrations above 30 nM in vitro. The optimal dose was identified as 5 nmol PSMA-914 for NIR-pCLE imaging with cellular resolution in LNCaP xenografts. PET/MRI confirmed high tumor uptake and a favorable distribution profile of PSMA-914. NIR-pCLE imaging enabled real-time, single-cell-level detection of PSMA-positive tissue, visualizing tumor heterogeneity, confirmed by ex vivo microscopy and imaging. This preclinical proof of concept demonstrates the potential of intraoperative PSMA-specific NIR-pCLE imaging to visualize tissue structures in real time at cellular resolution. Clinical implementation could provide surgeons with valuable additional information, potentially advancing PCa patient care through improved surgical precision.