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Clinical and Translational Biophotonics (Translational)

Clinical and Translational Biophotonics (Translational)

26 - 29 April 2026 | The Westin Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort | Fort Lauderdale, Florida UNITED STATES

Through significant technological advances, optical techniques have been playing an ever-increasing role in the study and treatment of issues related to life sciences ranging from molecular-level investigation to clinical treatment of patients.

The latest advances in molecular probe development, life science imaging, novel and more powerful optical instrumentation and its application to study fundamental biological processes and clinical investigations will be presented. This progress in instrumentation development and its rapid application represents important enablers that permit studies not possible a few years ago. 

Cumulatively, the meetings in this congress bring together leaders in the field whose contributions are significantly advancing the state of the art in biological and medical research through the use of optical technologies. 

 

 

Topic Categories

Clinical and Translational Biophotonics (Translational)
  1. Preclinical disease research: techniques and applications
    • Molecular contrast agents, probes and reporters
    • Diffuse optical spectroscopy and Imaging methods for small animal models of cancer and other diseases
    • Optical imaging of the cancer microenvironment, processes and pathways
    • Targeted molecular imaging of cancer and quantitative validation methods
    • Bioluminescence techniques and applications to disease research
    • Photoacoustics in disease research
    • Intravital, Raman and multiphoton microscopy for pre-clinical disease research
  2. Intravital microscopy for clinical applications
    • OCT techniques and applications in humans
    • Endomicroscopy
    • FLIM for clinical applications
    • Multimodal microscopy for clinical applications
    • Raman microscopy and endoscopy for clinical applications
    • Micro-elastography and optical biomechanics
    • Skin imaging techniques and applications
  3. Clinical spectroscopy
    • Optical properties of disease
    • Intravital spectroscopy for clinical applications
    • Hyperspectral imaging techniques and applications in medicine
    • Modeling of light propagation and optical properties
  4. Intrasurgical imaging
    • Optical approaches for surgical guidance
    • Intravital optical biopsy
    • Perfusion evaluation
    • Combined contrast agent / imaging approaches
    • Dynamic contrast
    • Digital staining microscopy
    • Applications in neurological surgery
    • Applications in cancer resection
  5. Non-invasive optical imaging for disease applications
    • Tomography approaches for clinical applications
    • Multi-modal imaging (e.g. combined with x-ray, MRI, ultrasound)
    • Photoacoustic techniques and applications in the clinic
  6. Optical therapeutics / theranostics
    • PDT, agents, techniques and applications
    • Thermal ablation
    • Agents for optical therapy
    • Laser surgery
    • Optical dosimetry
  7. Clinical translation: biophotonics in the clinic and beyond
    • Global health
    • Applications in women’s health
    • Applications in ophthalmology
    • Applications in dermatology
    • New contrast agents in the clinic
    • Testing and evaluation of new clinical modalities
    • Machine Learning and AI approaches
    • Challenges and trajectories of clinical translation
    • Skin color bias studies

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Plenary Speakers

Emmanuel Beaurepaire

École Polytechnique, FRANCE

Color and multicontrast multiphoton imaging of brain and scattering tissue

Multiphoton imaging is popular for tissue studies due to its capability to maintain subcellular resolution in scattering samples. It also enables multiparametric imaging when combining wavelengths, polarization and nonlinear responses. The talk will discuss advances in high-information content microscopy.

About the Speaker

Emmanuel Beaurepaire is a tissue multiphoton microscopy specialist. He works at the Laboratory for Optics and Biosciences (LOB) at École Polytechnique in Palaiseau, France, where he is a research director appointed by the CNRS. The LOB microscopy group has pioneered several multiphoton imaging developments, including multicolor and label-free nonlinear imaging, two-photon light-sheet excitation and wavefront control. These developments aim to address issues of complexity, speed and depth in tissue imaging. We apply these strategies to study embryonic and nervous tissue development and to develop optical diagnostics.
 

YongKeun Park

KAIST, REPUBLIC OF KOREA

Holotomography for 3D Biology and Regenerative Medicine: From Fundamental Optics to Real-World Clinical Impact

Holotomography enables quantitative, label-free 3D imaging of living cells and tissues. I will present recent advances in 3D imaging platforms, virtual staining with AI and emerging clinical applications, spanning digital pathology, regenerative medicine, IVF and biomanufacturing.

About the Speaker

YongKeun (Paul) Park is a Professor of Physics at KAIST and Director of the Virtual 3D Biology Center. His team has developed techniques in quantitative phase imaging and holotomography, bridging fundamental optics with biological and clinical applications. He has published more than 200 peer-review journals with +21K citations. As Cofounder and CEO of Tomocube Inc., he has led the commercialization of holotomography platforms used in around 200 research institutes and hospitals worldwide. His current work integrates computational imaging, 3D cell biology, and AI-driven cell analyses for applications in digital pathology and reproductive and regenerative medicine. He is a Fellow of Optica (OSA) and SPIE.
 

Rebecca Richards-Kortum

Rice University, UNITED STATES

From Cells to Surgery: Deep Learning Microscopy for Precision Oncology

Deep-learning-enabled microscopy overcomes optical limits of conventional imaging by rapidly generating large-scale, slide-free cellular and vascular maps at high resolution, enabling early point-of-care cancer detection and intraoperative margin assessment in resource-limited settings.

About the Speaker

Rebecca Richards-Kortum is a bioengineer dedicated to developing low-cost medical technologies to improve global health. As the Malcolm Gillis University Professor at Rice University, she leads interdisciplinary teams creating innovative imaging systems and diagnostics for early cancer detection and newborn and maternal care in resource-limited settings. Her work has led to patented devices, clinical impact across more than 40 countries and adoption in global health programs. A MacArthur Fellow and passionate educator, she co-founded programs training students to apply engineering to health challenges. She is a member of the US National Academies of Engineering, Science, and Medicine, reflecting broad impact across research, education and policy.
 

Faisal Mahmood

Harvard University, UNITED STATES

Generative, and Agentic AI for Biomedicine

Generative and agentic AI are transforming biomedicine. In this talk we will present advances in computational pathology, weakly supervised whole-slide learning, multimodal biomarkers, foundation models, generative copilots, and 3D pathology, and the development of a multimodal temporal patient foundation model enabling retrieval, forecasting, and interpretable clinical decision support.

About the Speaker

Dr. Faisal Mahmood is the Director of the MGB AI Research Center and an Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School. He is a full member of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute / Harvard Cancer Center, an Associate Member of the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. His laboratory works on developing foundation models, generative and agentic AI algorithms, methods, and techniques for healthcare with a particular focus on disease diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic response prediction. Dr. Mahmood's lab has developed several widely used methods and algorithms for digital and computational pathology and his labs works has been published in major scientific journals.

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Invited Speakers

Clinical and Translational Biophotonics (Translational)
  • Stefan Andersson Engels, Tyndall National InstituteIreland
    Clinical Neonatal and Mannequin Lung Oxygen Measurements Based on Gas in Scattering Media Absorption Spectroscopy (GASMAS)
  • Anuradha Godavarty, Florida International UniversityUnited States
    Is Spatial fNIRS the Next Step Towards Mapping Peripheral Tissue Oxygenation and Flow Dynamics?
  • Jana Kainerstorfer, Carnegie Mellon UniversityUnited States
    Title to be Announced
  • Amir Nahas, Strasbourg UniversityFrance
    Noise Correlation Inspired Elastography for In Vivo Stiffness Mapping Using An Unmodified Commercial Endoscope
  • Angelo Pierangelo, Ecole PolytechniqueFrance
    Pushing the Limits of In Vivo Diagnostics with Mueller Polarimetric Imaging From Pioneering Clinical Translation to Next-Generation Systems for Major Medical Challenges
  • Frederique Vanholsbeeck, University of AucklandNew Zealand
    A Tale of Force and Light Part II: How Optical Coherence Tomography and Raman Spectroscopy, Combined with Mechanical Testing, Reveal the Dynamic Behavior of Healthy and Diseased Articular Cartilage

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Special Events and Programs

Bridging Engineering and Critical-Care for Optical Neuromonitoring (BEACON)

Saturday, 25 April 09:00 - 16:00

This full-day consortium brings together clinicians and engineers to discuss state-of-the-art optical neuromonitoring technologies for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) patients. 

The main three goals are:

(1) Bring together clinicians and engineers for direct conversation about challenges and opportunities for optical neuromonitoring in ECMO care.

(2) Document current strengths, gaps and opportunities through structured SWOT analysis for group dissemination.

(3) Establish connections for new collaborations and fundable projects. To achieve this, the meeting will feature clinical and engineering keynote addresses, two 90-minute topic-focused sessions, each with 4-6 short (10m) panelist talks followed by a 30m panel discussion.

The event will conclude with an interactive SWOT analysis to summarize discussion, document key challenges and opportunities and establish next steps for this new working group. Optica Members Only. RSVP Required. Please RSVP here. 

Sponsored By: Optica Technical Group on Tissue Imaging and Spectroscopy

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Biophotonics Industry Lunch & Learn: Meet the Employers

Sunday, 26 April 12:00 - 13:30

Oceanside
Join us for the Lunch and Learn on Sunday, 26 April, during the Optica Biophotonics Congress. This interactive session will feature insights and discussions from leading companies in the field, including Single Quantum, Light Conversion, INO and PIONIRS. Attendees will enjoy lunch while learning about emerging technologies, industry perspectives and opportunities for collaboration across the optics and photonics community.

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From Fiber to Brain Implants: Navigating a Career in Biophotonics & Neurotechnology

Monday, 27 April 12:00 - 13:00

Bonnet
How do you go from working with optical fibers to building implantable devices for the brain? A candid and interactive session on navigating interdisciplinary research, career pivots and translating photonics into real-world impact — where in vivo sensing serves as a key pathway toward clinical translation. This session is designed for undergraduate and graduate students who aspire to build impactful careers in technology while navigating their academic and professional paths. 

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The Impact of AI on Biophotonics Research

Tuesday, 28 April 14:00 - 15:30

This panel discussion will examine the expanding role of artificial intelligence (AI) across the biophotonics research spectrum, from basic discovery science to translational and clinical applications. Panelists will highlight how AI is being used to analyze complex biological data, generate new hypotheses and accelerate the translation of fundamental findings into practical tools and therapies. The discussion will also address key challenges, including data integration, model interpretability, reproducibility and ethical considerations and will emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration. Overall, the panel will underscore AI’s potential to enhance biophotonics research at multiple levels while highlighting the need for responsible and rigorous implementation and standardization. This panel discussion is a joint event by the Clinical and Translational Biophotonics, Optical Coherence Tomography and Optical Tomography and Spectroscopy Topicals. Please note this panel is part of the technical program and accessible to full technical registrants only. 

Moderator

Sanathana Konugolu Venkata Sekar
Tyndall National InstituteIRELAND

Panelists

Helena Diez
OpticaUNITED KINGDOM

Jonathan Liu
Stanford UniversityUNITED STATES

Faisal Mahmood
Harvard UniversityUNITED STATES

Nishant Mohan
Boston UniversityUNITED STATES

Lingyan Shi
University of California San DiegoUNITED STATES

Organizers

Sanathana Konugolu Venkata Sekar
Tyndall National InstituteIRELAND

Danuta Sampson
Lions Eye InstituteAUSTRALIA

Laura Di Sieno
Politecnico di MilanoITALY

Martin Villiger
Harvard UniversityUNITED STATES

Alex Walsh
Texas A&M UniversityUNITED STATES

Junjie Yao
Duke UniversityUNITED STATES

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Industry Program

Two Industry Sessions at the Optica Biophotonics Congress 2026 will explore how innovative ideas are successfully turned into a marketable product. These sessions will also foster discussion on the key factors that drive market adoption and overall product success. 

Industry Chairs

Kate Bechtel
Ripple Medical, USA
Congress Industry Chair

Marco Arrigoni
Light Conversion, USA
Congress Industry Vice Chair

Panel Session I: Is Helping Patients Enough? What Makes for a Successful Product

Tuesday, 28 April 17:00 - 18:30
Las Ojas I,II,V,VI

Researchers want their technology to be used by patients around the world, fulfilling an underlying driver for their work. A possible path to realize this goal involves commercialization of this technology via a major player in the market that can handle final development and distribution. This session will discuss what makes a particular technology attractive to a company. How is the unmet need being solved to address a market, with considerations, for example, of assessing fit into existing workflows, cost margins and general risk reduction. 

Two invited speakers from large medical device companies will weigh in on what they look for during discovery - both internal and via acquisition. The presentations will be followed by a Q&A opportunity with additional panelists. 

The panel will be followed by a networking reception to provide an opportunity to continue important conversations and network with industry representatives. 

Speakers

Blake Axelrod
BDUNITED STATES

Panelists

Conor Evans
Wellman Center for PhotomedicineUNITED STATES

Alexa Hudnut
ŌURAUNITED STATES

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Industry Engagement Networking Event

Tuesday, 28 April 18:30 - 17:00

The Industry Chairs are organizing an engagement event to provide an opportunity to continue important conversations and network with industry representatives. Details will be provided soon.

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Panel Session II: Building an Effective Start-up

Wednesday, 29 April 10:30 - 12:00
Las Ojas I,II,V,VI

Start-up companies fill a gap between early stage research and de-risked technology or a completed product. Founders must consider how to structure product development to achieve their goals in the time frame of the funding runway. Critical to this is defining the end game at the beginning - what does success look like to you as a founder? How are milestones and funding rounds planned to maximize likelihood of this success?

Two invited speakers will share their experiences. The presentations will be followed by a Q&A opportunity with additional panelists.

Speakers

Stephen Boppart
University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignUNITED STATES

Trevor McCaw
Ripple MedicalUNITED STATES

Panelists

Giulio Cerullo
Cambridge Raman Imaging LtdUNITED KINGDOM

Jean-Pierre Bouchard
Institut National d'OptiqueCANADA

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