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colitis-associated cancer
Crohn’s disease
confocal laser endomicroscopy
computed tomography
fluorescein isothiocyanate
inflammatory bowel disease
sessile serrated adenoma
single-photon emission computed tomography
tumor necrosis factor
vedolizumab
Molecular imaging is based on the principle of utilizing fluorescently labeled probes with high specificity toward defined molecular targets and their subsequent detection and visualization with endoscopic devices ( Table 21.2 ), thereby enabling visualization of single molecules or receptors . Generally speaking, different type of probes can be utilized for molecular imaging such as antibodies, enzymes, affibodies, lectins, or peptides, all of which have certain advantages and disadvantages, as summarized in Table 21.1 . The ideal probe for molecular imaging should exhibit high affinity toward the molecular target, rapid binding kinetics with sufficient tissue penetration, and at the same time low immunogenicity.
Antibodies | Peptides | Enzymes | Affibodies | Lectins | |
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Advantages |
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Disadvantages |
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Complex formulation | Large size |
Wide-field detection devices | Autofluorescence imaging | |
Multimodal colonoscope CF-Y0012 (Olympus) | Collection of wide-field images of white light, fluorescence, and reflectance | |
Fiber-optic colonoscope FC-38 LV (Pentax) | Collection of wide-field images from probes labeled with Cy5 | |
Narrow field of view devices | Probe-based CLE (Mauna Kea, France) | |
Endoscope-based CLE (Pentax Medical, discontinued) | ||
Handheld confocal endomicroscopy probe (FIVE 1, Optiscan, Australia) |
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