# Optical biopsy of nasal cavity cancer with confocal laser endomicroscopy – a pilot study

**Authors:** Flurin Müller-Diesing, Matti Sievert, Bharat Akhanda Panuganti, Marc Aubreville, Nils Porsche, Stephan Hackenberg, Manuel Stöth, Agmal Scherzad, Markus Wirth, Philipp Winnand, Miguel Goncalves

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00405-025-09968-8 · 2026-02-16

## TL;DR

This pilot study explores using confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) as an optical biopsy tool for nasal cavity cancer during surgery, showing promising results in distinguishing tumor from normal tissue.

## Contribution

The study is the first to evaluate CLE for optical biopsy in nasal cavity carcinoma and establishes NCC-specific criteria for tumor identification.

## Key findings

- Tumor sequences showed greater structural heterogeneity, atypical vascular patterns, and increased cell size variation compared to normal mucosa.
- Investigators achieved an average sensitivity of 86.27% and specificity of 94.13% using CLE evaluations.
- There was substantial agreement (Fleiss’ kappa: 0.75) between expert-based evaluations and score-based results.

## Abstract

Nasal cavity carcinoma (NCC) arises in an anatomically and aesthetically critical region. Complete resection with negative margins is mandatory, yet even minimal additional tissue removal may cause substantial cosmetic and functional morbidity and increase the need for reconstruction. This underscores the need for an intraoperative optical biopsy. We report the first evaluation of confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) as a potential tool for optical biopsy in NCC.

In this pilot feasibility study including six patients, a blinded evaluation of 68 CLE video sequences (34 normal mucosa, 34 tumor), containing 4500 images, was performed independently by three investigators. A previously established scoring system from CLE studies in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma was applied to determine NCC-specific cut-off values and to assess concordance with investigator-based evaluations.

Compared with normal mucosa, tumor sequences exhibited greater structural heterogeneity, atypical vascular patterns, increased variation in cell size, and indistinct cell borders. Investigators achieved an average sensitivity of 86.27% ± 9.1 and specificity of 94.13% ± 6.36. The comparison between all expert-based evaluations and all score-based results demonstrated an overall substantial agreement (Fleiss’ kappa: 0.75).

CLE appears feasible as an intraoperative optical biopsy in nasal cavity carcinoma. Prospective clinical studies should test clinical utility such as rates of complete resection, defect size, margin sampling efficiency.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** nasal cavity carcinoma (MONDO:0003212), head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (MONDO:0010150)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** nasal cavity cancer (MESH:D009669)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002759/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002759