Rapid Impedance Spectroscopy for Monitoring Tissue Impedance, Temperature, and Treatment Outcome During Electroporation-Based Therapies

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2021 May;68(5):1536-1546. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2020.3036535. Epub 2021 Apr 21.

Abstract

Objective: Electroporation-based therapies (EBTs) employ high voltage pulsed electric fields (PEFs) to permeabilize tumor tissue; this results in changes in electrical properties detectable using electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Currently, commercial potentiostats for EIS are limited by impedance spectrum acquisition time ( ∼ 10 s); this timeframe is much larger than pulse periods used with EBTs ( ∼ 1 s). In this study, we utilize rapid EIS techniques to develop a methodology for characterizing electroporation (EP) and thermal effects associated with high-frequency irreversible EP (H-FIRE) in real-time by monitoring inter-burst impedance changes.

Methods: A charge-balanced, bipolar rectangular chirp signal is proposed for rapid EIS. Validation of rapid EIS measurements against a commercial potentiostat was conducted in potato tissue using flat-plate electrodes and thereafter for the measurement of impedance changes throughout IRE treatment. Flat-plate electrodes were then utilized to uniformly heat potato tissue; throughout high-voltage H-FIRE treatment, low-voltage inter-burst impedance measurements were used to continually monitor impedance change and to identify a frequency at which thermal effects are delineated from EP effects.

Results: Inter-burst impedance measurements (1.8 kHz - 4.93 MHz) were accomplished at 216 discrete frequencies. Impedance measurements at frequencies above ∼ 1 MHz served to delineate thermal and EP effects in measured impedance.

Conclusion: We demonstrate rapid-capture ( 1 s) EIS which enables monitoring of inter-burst impedance in real-time. For the first time, we show impedance analysis at high frequencies can delineate thermal effects from EP effects in measured impedance.

Significance: The proposed waveform demonstrates the potential to perform inter-burst EIS using PEFs compatible with existing pulse generator topologies.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Dielectric Spectroscopy*
  • Electric Impedance
  • Electroporation*
  • Temperature
  • Treatment Outcome