| Literature DB >> 30291698 |
Brian W Pogue1, Eben L Rosenthal2, Samuel Achilefu3, Gooitzen M van Dam4.
Abstract
Molecular image-guided surgery has the potential for translating the tools of molecular pathology to real-time guidance in surgery. As a whole, there are incredibly positive indicators of growth, including the first United States Food and Drug Administration clearance of an enzyme-biosynthetic-activated probe for surgery guidance, and a growing number of companies producing agents and imaging systems. The strengths and opportunities must be continued but are hampered by important weaknesses and threats within the field. A key issue to solve is the inability of macroscopic imaging tools to resolve microscopic biological disease heterogeneity and the limitations in microscopic systems matching surgery workflow. A related issue is that parsing out true molecular-specific uptake from simple-enhanced permeability and retention is hard and requires extensive pathologic analysis or multiple in vivo tests, comparing fluorescence accumulation with standard histopathology and immunohistochemistry. A related concern in the field is the over-reliance on a finite number of chosen preclinical models, leading to early clinical translation when the probe might not be optimized for high intertumor variation or intratumor heterogeneity. The ultimate potential may require multiple probes, as are used in molecular pathology, and a combination with ultrahigh-resolution imaging and image recognition systems, which capture the data at a finer granularity than is possible by the surgeon. Alternatively, one might choose a more generalized approach by developing the tracer based on generic hallmarks of cancer to create a more "one-size-fits-all" concept, similar to metabolic aberrations as exploited in fluorodeoxyglucose - positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) (i.e., Warburg effect) or tumor acidity. Finally, methods to approach the problem of production cost minimization and regulatory approvals in a manner consistent with the potential revenue of the field will be important. In this area, some solid steps have been demonstrated in the use of fluorescent labeling commercial antibodies and separately in microdosing studies with small molecules. (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).Entities:
Keywords: cancer; fluorescent; resection; surgical; therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30291698 PMCID: PMC6210787 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.23.10.100601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170
A SWOT analysis of the field for clinical molecular guided surgery.
| Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|
| • Robust commercial production of fluorescence guidance surgical/laparoscopy systems | • Mismatch between imaging tools today and ability to see/use biochemical heterogeneity |
| • Phase 0/1 trials occurring | • Over-reliance on preclinical tumors that are specifically chosen as highly positive |
| • First FDA approval for a biosynthetic-activated molecular surgical probe has occurred in 2017 and is being widely adopted | • Variability in clinical trial data reporting and target validation |
| • Lack of standardization in analyses | |
| • Regulatory processes not optimally designed to assess low-dose/near-microdose agents for molecular imaging or multiple probes at one time | |
| Opportunities | Threats |
| • Well-developed molecular pathology tools to phenotype biopsy tissue prior to surgery | • Misinterpretation of |
| • Proven molecular probes (metabolism, immunology, and mRNA) | • Production and toxicity tests require lower cost approaches |
| • Potential to save surgical time or make resection better match presurgical images | • Surgical trials inherently difficult to run due to variations between surgeons, institutional norms, and pathology processing |
| • Recognize close or positive margins in real-time during surgery | |
| • New strategies for time consuming procedures such as sentinel node mapping | • Reimbursement for intraoperative imaging not established |
Listing of fluorescence guided surgery procedures and probes listed in clinicaltrials.gov.
| Type of molecular probe | Molecule/probe | Commercial name | Clinical site or purpose (registered at |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vascular perfusion/flow | Indocyanine green | ICG, AIM ICG | Many organ/tissue sites ( |
| Lymphatic flow/sentinel nodes tissue retention | Indocyanine green | ICG | Breast, parathyroid, tumors ( |
| Methylene blue | MB-102 | ||
| Autofluorescence | NADH/FAD | n/a | Many organ/tissue sites ( |
| DNA intercalation | Proflavine | n/a | Squamous cell neoplasia, Barrett’s esophagus, colon polyps, dysplasia, anal dysplasia, head and neck cancer, cervix cancer, uterine cancer, oral disorders, gastric cancer (17 trials) |
| Molecular vibrations | Raman scattering | n/a | Liver, macula, foot ulcers, glucose ( |
| Metabolism—enzyme or synthetic activity | ALA | Gliolan | Glioma, bladder (13 trials) |
| Levulan | Skin precancers and cancers ( | ||
| NPC-07 | Glioma (one trial) | ||
| Hexaminolevulinate | Cysview | Bladder, cervix, colorectal cancer (four trials) | |
| Methyl aminolevulinate | Metvixia | Skin AKs, cancers, Bowen’s disease, acne (68 mostly PDT trials) | |
| Cathepsin activatable | LUM015 | Sarcoma, colorectal, pancreatic esophageal, breast, prostate cancers (five trials) | |
| Protease activatable | AVB-620 | Breast cancer (two trials) | |
| Metabolism—carbohydrates and proteins | Fluorescent lectin | n/a | Colorectal cancer, neoplasms, polyps (one trial) |
| HSP90 inhibitor | HS-196 | Solid tumors (one trial) | |
| Chlorotoxin blocking chloride channels with Cy5.5 | BLZ-100 | glioma, breast, CNS, skin, sarcoma (five trials) | |
| 7-aa peptide—IRDye800CW | KSP-910638G heptapeptide | Gastrointestinal malignancies | |
| c-Met targeting peptide | EMI-137 | Colon cancer, esophageal cancer and high grade dysplasia, papillary thyroid cancer, lung cancer (four trials) | |
| Immunology—receptor and cell surface protein targeting | Folate receptor targeting | OTL38 | Renal cell, lung, ovarian, pituitary, pleural cancers (nine trials) |
| Tumor-specific integrin receptor binding | LS301 | Breast cancer (one trial) | |
| Anti-EGFR binding peptide | QRH-882260 | Colon cancer, cholangiocarcinoma (three trials) | |
| Anti-EGFR affibody | ABY-029 | Glioma, sarcoma, head, and neck (three trials) | |
| GRPR receptor binding peptide | 68GA-BBN-IRDye800CW | Glioblastoma (two trials) | |
| VEGF antibody | Bevacizumab-IRDye800CW | Esophageal, breast cancer, adenomatous polyposis (nine trials) | |
| EGFR antibody | Cetuximab-IRDye800CW | Pancreatic cancer, brain neoplasms, glioma, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, head and neck cancer (four trials) | |
| EGFR antibody | Panitumumab-IRDye800 | Pancreatic cancer, brain neoplasms, glioma, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, head and neck cancer (four trials) | |
| Carbonic anhydrase IX antibody | 111In-DOTA-Girentuximab-IRDye800CW | Renal cell carcinoma (one trial) |
Fig. 1Differences in bulk contrast versus high microscopic contrast are shown. Bulk tissue imaging of NIR fluorescence image from LS301 (a) overlaid on white light image of a mouse tumor, showing a fluorescence to background signal ratio, reported as 1.2 across mice. (b) High-resolution fluorescence microscopy shows colocalization (yellow) of iRFP signal (green) and LS301 fluorescence (red) exhibiting the expected high microscopic heterogeneity of the cancer. (c) Histological confirmation of the same slide showing cancerous growth corresponding to the areas marked by iRFP and LS301 fluorescence. Visualization of a tumor from trastuzumab-IRDye800CW, with a color white-light images (a), fluorescence (e) and overlay fluorescence of the two (f), with a reported tumor to background ratio of 2.7. The H&E stained tissue slides (g) and (h) show the subcutaneous tumor microscopy with heterogeneity on the 10’s of microns spatial scale, [scale bars 1 mm (g) and (h)]. Fluorescent images of cetuximab-IRDye800CW are shown in serially cut fresh tumor (i) for different weights with a subsequent reduced TBR at each size, relative to normal tissue. The histological image and from H&E (j) and EGFR (k) are shown with the ex vivo fluorescent images (l) of a representative section showing the microscopic heterogeneity present in the tumor, and high labeling contrast.
Fig. 2Example of microscopic target validation: panitumumab-IRDye800 localizing in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (yellow line) but not in surrounding stromal and inflammatory tissues. This represents positive target validation but does not rule out off-target effects or failure to target all elements of cancer distributed throughout the tumor mass.