R01DE031307
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
A Miniaturized and High-Frequency Acoustic Imaging System for Oral Health and Diseases of the Head and Neck - Project Summary
Periodontitis and oral disease are widespread, with major negative impacts on quality of life. Radiography is the standard of care in imaging but is limited to assessing hard tissue. In the last three years, we have shown that ultrasound imaging offers significant advantages to oral health, including non-invasive and real-time assessment of periodontal probing depths, cementoenamel junction, gingival thickness, gingival perfusion/hypoxia, and clinical attachment loss.
However, further clinical work in this field is limited by the large size of the ultrasound transducers. They are simply too large to access the posterior teeth. While smaller transducers exist, they cannot operate at the high frequency (>40 MHz) needed to image the small feature sizes involved in oral health. Therefore, we have established a three-way academic-industrial partnership to refine and finalize these devices for oral health.
Dr. Jokerst at UCSD serves as the Principal Investigator and has pioneered the use of photoacoustic imaging in oral health. VisualSonics Corp. is our industrial partner. Dr. Jokerst's preliminary data was collected on VisualSonics equipment, and this company has a 20-year track record in developing high-frequency transducers, including recent 510K-approved systems for human use. The clinical partner is Dr. Casey Chen, who is Chair of Periodontology at USC and will validate the system with human subjects.
Aim 1 of the work will build and validate a small hockey stick-style transducer. While this design is already common, hockey stick transducers above 20 MHz are not available. Aim 2 will integrate diode lasers into the system for photoacoustic imaging to complement ultrasound. Aim 3 will develop image-processing algorithms to automatically export metrics of oral health, such as clinical attachment loss and probing depth. Such automated image-processing is critical to broad clinical acceptance. Aim 4 will validate this device in healthy and diseased human subjects with comparisons to clinical gold standards.
The significance of this work is based on the widespread prevalence of periodontal disease and the remarkable new insight that acoustic imaging offers in diagnosis and treatment planning. The innovative outcomes include non-invasive charting, direct measurements of the cementoenamel junction, noninvasive biotyping, and 3D maps of inflammation near implants. The work is feasible because of the track record of all three partners, as well as their history of collaboration.
This is a good investment for NIH because there is no miniaturized and high-frequency (>40 MHz) ultrasound transducer available, despite the dramatic improvement in spatial resolution that high frequency offers. The proposal offers deliverables at all ranges of risk, and the ultrasound transducer is highly likely to succeed with implications well beyond oral health. Applications in endoscopy, head and neck diseases, as well as transrectal/transvaginal imaging are obvious.
Periodontitis and oral disease are widespread, with major negative impacts on quality of life. Radiography is the standard of care in imaging but is limited to assessing hard tissue. In the last three years, we have shown that ultrasound imaging offers significant advantages to oral health, including non-invasive and real-time assessment of periodontal probing depths, cementoenamel junction, gingival thickness, gingival perfusion/hypoxia, and clinical attachment loss.
However, further clinical work in this field is limited by the large size of the ultrasound transducers. They are simply too large to access the posterior teeth. While smaller transducers exist, they cannot operate at the high frequency (>40 MHz) needed to image the small feature sizes involved in oral health. Therefore, we have established a three-way academic-industrial partnership to refine and finalize these devices for oral health.
Dr. Jokerst at UCSD serves as the Principal Investigator and has pioneered the use of photoacoustic imaging in oral health. VisualSonics Corp. is our industrial partner. Dr. Jokerst's preliminary data was collected on VisualSonics equipment, and this company has a 20-year track record in developing high-frequency transducers, including recent 510K-approved systems for human use. The clinical partner is Dr. Casey Chen, who is Chair of Periodontology at USC and will validate the system with human subjects.
Aim 1 of the work will build and validate a small hockey stick-style transducer. While this design is already common, hockey stick transducers above 20 MHz are not available. Aim 2 will integrate diode lasers into the system for photoacoustic imaging to complement ultrasound. Aim 3 will develop image-processing algorithms to automatically export metrics of oral health, such as clinical attachment loss and probing depth. Such automated image-processing is critical to broad clinical acceptance. Aim 4 will validate this device in healthy and diseased human subjects with comparisons to clinical gold standards.
The significance of this work is based on the widespread prevalence of periodontal disease and the remarkable new insight that acoustic imaging offers in diagnosis and treatment planning. The innovative outcomes include non-invasive charting, direct measurements of the cementoenamel junction, noninvasive biotyping, and 3D maps of inflammation near implants. The work is feasible because of the track record of all three partners, as well as their history of collaboration.
This is a good investment for NIH because there is no miniaturized and high-frequency (>40 MHz) ultrasound transducer available, despite the dramatic improvement in spatial resolution that high frequency offers. The proposal offers deliverables at all ranges of risk, and the ultrasound transducer is highly likely to succeed with implications well beyond oral health. Applications in endoscopy, head and neck diseases, as well as transrectal/transvaginal imaging are obvious.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
La Jolla,
California
92093
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 369% from $664,095 to $3,117,265.
San Diego University Of California was awarded
High-Freq Acoustic Imaging for Oral Health & Head/Neck
Project Grant R01DE031307
worth $3,117,265
from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research in June 2022 with work to be completed primarily in La Jolla California United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.121 Oral Diseases and Disorders Research.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Academic-Industrial Partnerships (AIP) to Translate and Validate In Vivo Imaging Systems (R01 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/21/26
Period of Performance
6/21/22
Start Date
5/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.1M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.1M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01DE031307
Transaction History
Modifications to R01DE031307
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01DE031307
SAI Number
R01DE031307-248822711
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NP00 NIH National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research
Funding Office
75NP00 NIH National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research
Awardee UEI
UYTTZT6G9DT1
Awardee CAGE
50854
Performance District
CA-50
Senators
Dianne Feinstein
Alejandro Padilla
Alejandro Padilla
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0873) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,297,788 | 100% |
Modified: 5/21/26