Photomedicine and Biophysical Microscopy of Cancer

The Spring Laboratory at Northeastern University bridges biophysics, biomedical optics and cancer biology to selectively target microscopic deposits of tumor cells left behind by standard therapies that limit our ability to cure many malignancies. Optical spectroscopic imaging and photophysics are applied to visualize and mop up this residual disease. The ultimate goal of the program is to reduce cancer recurrence and mortality by establishing new approaches for personalized medicine that address tumor heterogeneity, drug-resistance and molecular mechanisms of treatment escape. 

Advanced-stage cancer patients are presently subjected to a grueling treatment regimen consisting of surgical tumor debulking and high-dose-intensity chemotherapy. These standard approaches frequently hit a wall due to dose-limiting toxicities as well as mechanisms of drug-resistance and treatment escape via cell signaling networks. To address these challenges, the group’s efforts focus on developments in photomedicine in concert with guidance from in vivo microscopy for the discovery of dynamic molecular mechanisms of treatment escape and for the rational design of therapeutic regimens that overcome resistance. In vivo imaging is used for microscopic-resolution “optical biopsy” to identify drug-resistant cancer cells and to monitor cell signaling events without the need for invasive surgeries and tissue biopsies that can miss smaller lesions. Near infrared light activation of molecular-targeted chromophores is applied to selectively damage drug-resistant cancer cells, to suppress mechanisms of treatment escape and to sensitize the tumor to systemic therapies—including chemotherapy and immunotherapy.

A major focus of the group is to develop multicolor microendoscopy and molecular-targeted agents for both imaging and therapy. The group builds new fluorescence microscopy tools (e.g., hyperspectral, lifetime-resolved and FRET imaging); develops real-time image computation software; designs and synthesizes molecular-targeted probes; and, develops mouse models of cancer when required.

Image Credit: Bryan Spring

Image Credit: Nima Davoudzadeh

Latest Publication

 Price L, Tatz J, Sutin J, Spring BQ. "Multi-objective optimization of custom compound prism arrays for multiplexed optical imaging". Optics Express 2023; 31(6), 9739–49. Download PDF

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News

Feb 12, 2024 - Bryan Spring and Sabrina Oliveira gave talks on Photoimmunotherapy and Image Guidance & Nanbobody-Targeted Photodynamic Therapy in Oncology chaired by Girgis Obaid and Anne-Laure Bulin for the International Photodynamic Association (IPA) video podcast/masterclass series.

The talks are now available to watch: https://www.internationalphotodynamic.com/ipa-video-podcasts


Sept 11, 2023 - Bryan Spring is interviewed by Northeastern Global News discussing using laser to detect and target chemo-resistant cancer and stimulate the patient's immune system. Read the detailed report entitled "New treatment for ovarian cancer will use lasers to target chemo-resistant cells".


June 23, 2023 - The Spring research group, in collaboration with the Enderling lab at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Bob Gatenby and Rob Wenham at Moffitt Cancer Center, and Jose Conejo-Garcia at Duke, has been awarded a Physical Sciences Oncology Network grant (NCI U01 CA280849 ; ~$2.7M) titled "Fractionated photoimmunotherapy to harness low-dose immunostimulation in ovarian cancer"

April 19, 2023 - Talk and discussion with the Latin American Hub for Bioimaging through Open Hardware (LIBRE_hub, Santiago, Chile) exploring development of the custom femtosecond fiber laser into an open-source project 

April 4, 2023 - Jvalanti Prasad has been selected to receive the Undergraduate Research Award for Women in Physics at Northeastern University. Congratulations to Jvalanti! 

April 1, 2023 - Annabel Devault has been accepted to the Biological and Biomedical Sciences graduate PhD program at Yale. Congratulations to Annabel! 

March 2, 2023 - Congratulations to Liam Price, Julia Tatz and team on their new paper in Optics Express introducing a compound prism array designer software. The software features flexibility, ease-of-use, and a tremendous boost in computational speed to make compound prism array design practical for a variety of potential applications. Compound prisms are challenging to design and to optimize in commerical optical engineering software packages. Compound prisms will have high impact on optical spectrosocpy and multiplexed imaging for which they offer a unique combination of high transmission efficiency and linear dispersion over a broad spectral range. The software is freely available for academic use: https://github.com/jdtatz/compound-prism-designer. Those interested in licensing the algorithm and software for commericial use are invited to contact Prof. Spring via email or the Northeastern University Center for Research Innovation (CRi)

February 22, 2023 - The Spring research group, in colloboration with the Schaffer-Nishimura Lab at Cornell University, has been awarded a high-risk, high-reward concept grant (NCI R21 CA263452; ~$0.5M) to develop whole body, precision photomedicine using tumor-homing immune cells to deliver light.

November 1, 2022 - A few of us attended and presented a poster at the Smith Family Foundation Excellence in Biomedical Research 30th Anniversary event at the Harvard Club Boston. We are grateful to the Trustees and staff who organized the event, and to the foundation for support early in laying the bricks to start up our lab.

July 22, 2022 - Rebecca Harman and team have just published a paper in Biomedical Optics Express introducing a spectral vector denoising algorithm that filters out noise without sacrificing spatial information by leveraging redundant observations of spectral signatures within images of complex biological samples. The algorithm applies an n-dimensional Chebyshev or Fourier transform to cluster pixels based on spectral similarity independent of pixel intensity or location, and a denoising convolution filter is then applied in this spectral space. This innovative new image computation algorithm decreases fluorescence signal decomposition error up to 70% without degrading spatial resolution. The open source algorithm will be released soon for free academic use and available at springlabnu.com/software. Congratulations to Rebecca Harman and team!

October 22, 2021 - Bryan Spring, Eric Kercher, Matt Waguespack, and Kai Zhang were interviewed for a recent Electro Optics article discussing LEDs in phototherapy. Credit also to Ryan Lang.

September 3, 2021 - Dr. Ryan Lang's two-photon excitation spectra (700 - 1300 nm) and finding of enhanced multiplexing depth and photostability using long-wavelength two-photon excitation spectral peaks has been published in Biomedical Optics Express. Congratulations to Ryan!

August 10, 2021 - Ten multidisciplinary research teams will receive a combined $1,150,000 in funding as part of the inaugural year of Scialog: Advancing BioImaging, a three-year initiative, supported by Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA), the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and the Frederick Gardner Cottrell Foundation (FGCF), that aims to accelerate the development of the next generation of imaging technologies.


Funded by CZI:


Barbara Smith, Biological and Health Systems Engineering, Arizona State University

Bryan Spring, Physics, Northeastern University

Microendoscopy-Guided Diagnosis and Treatment of Early-Stage Ovarian Cancer


@cziscience @RCSA1 #ImagingTheFuture

Older News

August 5, 2021 - Congratulations to Dr. Ryan Lang who successfully defended his doctoral dissertation "Multiplexed In Vivo Imaging and Analysis Methods for Optical Imaging Biopsy of Cancer." Ryan entered the group with recognition as being exceptionally strong in theoretical physics. He put his math skills to use to solve difficult problems in dynamic imaging of tumor spatial heterogeneity and immunoscore using microendoscopy, and he grew into a team leader in physics, microscopy, and cancer biology. Ryan led several challenging projects to completion drawing on creativity and deep dives in quantum chemistry and multiphoton microscopy.  His productivity is reflected in his publication record—he has co-authored 8 papers published, under review, or to be submitted shortly during his graduate career.

March 26, 2021 - Congratulations to Sophia Renauld who will graduate this May with a degree in biomedical physics, and attend the Harvard-MIT MD PhD program starting this summer! Woohoo, Sophia! We are proud of you. 

February 24, 2021 - Prof. Spring has been selected as a Scialog Fellow for Advancing BioImaging (ABI), a new initiative jointly sponsored by the Research Corporation for Science Advancement, The Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative, and the Fredrick Gardner Cottrell Foundation.


Research Corporation for Science Advancement has selected 55 early-career researchers as Fellows for its new Scialog initiative, Advancing Bioimaging... 

January 6, 2021 - Cellaria Inc has launched a blogspot featuring a video interview with Prof. Spring:

June 15, 2020 - The Spring Research Group condemns acts of police brutality against Black communities and the entrenched systemic racism that has for far too long facilitated these acts. As physicists and medical researchers, our work is not separated from racial injustice. Physics and medical science are historically and presently dominated by white faces and voices, and there is an urgent need to enhance and to encourage the accessibility of physics as a field to underrepresented groups. The Spring Group recognizes the history of prejudice and racism inextricable from medical research and science. Institutions, including our own Northeastern University and Department of Physics, could do much more to combat racism in academia and science, especially anti-Black racism. We recognize that our silence on these issues has made us complicit in upholding institutional policies that come up short in the fight against racism. We commit to advocating for physics departments, including our own, to take concrete steps to begin outreach and recruiting policies that will help strengthen the diversity of our physics community with the hope that our voices, among others, will help to dismantle systemic racism within our society. 

We also want to provide some resources for allies looking to financially support anti-racist organizations and relief funds. This spreadsheet also has tabs with resources to educate yourself on racism and police brutality in the U.S., petitions to sign, and other ways to take action. These lists are by no means exhaustive, but hopefully provide a place to start. A couple highlighted places to donate to are the ACLU and the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

May 1, 2020 - Congratulations to Dr. Eric Kercher who successfully defended his doctoral dissertation "New Methods and Tools for Optimizing Precision Photomedicine Research." Eric is the Spring Lab's inaugural PhD student and graduate. Eric's publication record speaks for itself—he has co-authored 8 papers published and under review during his graduate training spanning photomedicine, cancer biology and new device development.

April 1, 2020 - The Spring Laboratory has been awarded a NIH-NCI R01 award (R01 CA226855, $3.2M) titled "Multiplexed and dynamically targeted photoimmunotherapy of heterogeneous, chemoresistant micrometastases guided by online in vivo optical imaging of cell-surface biomarkers".

June 28 to July 4, 2019 - The Spring Research Group presented at the International Photodynamic Association (IPA) World Congress 2019 in Boston. Congratulations to Eric, Arvind, and Ryan and all the poster award winners:

Eric Kercher — Poster of Excellence (Top 10) and Invited Slam Talk

Arvind Mohan — Poster of Excellence (Top 10) and Invited Slam Talk

Ryan Lang — Poster of Merit (Top 20)

June 6, 2019 - Congratulations to Eric Kercher who passed his preliminary thesis examination! 

Photo: group dinner at Petit Robert Bistro to celebrate. Left to right: Liam Price, Becca Harman, Alejandro Olmos, Bryan Spring, Ryan Lang, and Eric Kercher.

Feb 1 to 5, 2019 - The Spring Research Group presented at Photonics West 2019 in San Franciscio.

Eric Kercher: Real-time GPU accelerated hyperspectral unmixing, Poster 10889-40

Ryan Lang: Micro-image mosaicking for video-rate multi-channel fluorescence microendoscopy, Contributed oral presentation 10854-40, Endoscopic Microscopy

Kai Zhang: Custom fabrication of a high-performance femtosecond fiber laser for multiphoton microscopy, Contributed oral presentation 10882-28, Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences

Bryan Spring: Targeting drug-resistant glioblastoma stem cells using photodynamic therapy, Invited oral presentation 10860-3, Photodynamic Therapy

Sept 6, 2018 - Members of the Spring Lab present their work at the annual Smith Family Foundation Scientific Poster Session. 


The Smith Family Awards Program for Excellence in Biomedical Research has awarded $32.8 million in grants to support 163 newly independent faculty over the past 26 years. Each investigator receives $300,000 over three years.

Professor Spring received this prestigious award in 2017 for his project entitled: "Peering into Cancer Stem Cell Niches to Guide Suppression of Multiple Signaling Loop Pathways"


Left to right: Kai Zhang, Eric Kercher, Ryan Lang, and Taresh Sharan.

May 15, 2018 - Congrats to Ryan, Kai, Arvind, and Dr. Spring for their great presentations at the 2018 American Society for Photobiology Conference in Tampa Bay!

Visit to Moffitt Cancer Center to explore a new collaboration among mathematical oncologists, biomedical physicists, and ovarian tumor immunologists. Left to right: Jose Conejo-Garcia, Bryan Spring, Heiko Enderling, and Bob Gatenby (May 15, 2018; Tampa).