| Literature DB >> 30054696 |
Philippa Meershoek1,2, Matthias N van Oosterom1,2, Hervé Simon3, Laurent Mengus3, Tobias Maurer4,5, Pim J van Leeuwen2, Esther M K Wit2, Henk G van der Poel2, Fijs W B van Leeuwen6,7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Radioguided surgery has been widely used for clinical procedures such as sentinel node resections. In the (robot-assisted) laparoscopic setting radioguidance is realized using laparoscopic gamma probes, which have limited maneuverability. To increase the rotational freedom, a tethered DROP-IN gamma probe was designed. Here we present the first in vivo feasibility study of this technology in prostate cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Gamma probe; Prostate cancer; Radioguided surgery; Robotic surgery; Sentinel lymph node
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30054696 PMCID: PMC6267681 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-018-4095-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Summary findings
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Patients included | 10 |
| Age (years; mean ± SD (range)) | 68.9 ± 5.7 (59–77) |
| Patients receiving tracer(s) (%) | |
| - ICG-99mTc-nanocolloid | - 5 (50%) |
| - 99mTc-nanocolloid + ICG | - 5 (50%) |
| Total SN related hotspots on SPECT/CT | 30 |
| - Left | - 16 |
| - Right | - 14 |
| Total SNs specimens excised | 35 |
| - Left | - 18 |
| - Right | - 17 |
| Total SNs measured in vivo with DROP-IN probe | 20 |
| - | - |
| - | - |
| - | - |
| - | - |
| - | - |
| - Other locations (%) | - 11 (55%) |
| In vivo radioactivity | |
| - DROP-IN median counts (range)) | 675 (200–2600) |
| Total SNs measured in vivo for fluorescence | 19a |
| - Fluorescent SNs (%) | - 19 (100%) |
| Ex vivo radioactivity | |
| - DROP-IN probe (median counts (range)) | 682 (89–7000) |
| - Neoprobe (median counts (range)) | 378 (33–14,000) |
| Total SNs measured ex vivo for fluorescence | 18a |
| - Fluorescent SNs (%) | - 18 (100%) |
| Pathological examination (%) | |
| SNs found in excised SN specimens | 60 (100%) |
| - SNs tumor positive | - 1 (1.7%) |
| LNs found in excised nonSN specimens | 149 (100%) |
| - LNs tumor positive | - 0 (0%) |
| Resection status per patient ( | |
| R0 | 6 (60%) |
| R1 | 4 (40%) |
| Postoperative complications (%) | |
| Yes | 6 (60%) |
| - Urinary retention | - 2 (20%) |
| - Urinary leakage | - 2 (20%) |
| - Urinary infection | - 1 (10%) |
| - Parastomal hernia | - 1 (10%) |
| No | 4 (40%) |
aAll SNs that were measured for fluorescence were fluorescent in- and ex-vivo. One patient did not receive free ICG, and in one patient the SN was not measured ex vivo
Fig. 1Schematic DROP-IN concept. Going from preoperative imaging (SPECT/CT) to intraoperative guidance using a combination of the DROP-IN gamma probe and the Firefly fluorescence laparoscope integrated in the da Vinci surgical robotic system
Fig. 2Rotational freedom of the DROP-IN probe in vivo. (a) The da Vinci® ProGrasp® forceps was inserted from the lower left abdominally placed trocar. Arrows indicate the degrees of freedom. (b–g) The small gamma probe head connected to a flexible wire resulted in freely maneuvering the probe by the surgeon using the forceps
Fig. 3The surgical context of robot-assisted sentinel lymph node procedures—DROP-IN vs. fluorescence. Preoperative (a) CT, (b) SPECT/CT and (c) a volume rendered SPECT/CT give the surgeon information about the anatomical location of the sentinel nodes (SNs). (d) The surgeon operates the robotic console distant from the patient bed (in the background), but autonomously positions the DROP-IN probe towards a SN. The DROP-IN console provides a radioactive count number and acoustic signal as read-out. (e) As insert the Firefly™ fluorescent image of the SN identified using the DROP-IN