| Literature DB >> 33942183 |
Nikolaj Nerup1, Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen2, Jonas Hedelund Rønn3, Lars Konge2, Lars Bo Svendsen3, Michael Patrick Achiam3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anastomotic leakage (AL) after gastrointestinal resection is a devastating complication with huge consequences for the patient. As AL is associated with poor blood supply, tools for objective assessment of perfusion are in high demand. Indocyanine green angiography (ICG-FA) and quantitative analysis of ICG-FA (q-ICG) seem promising. This study aimed to investigate whether ICG-FA and q-ICG could improve perfusion assessment performed by surgeons of different experience levels.Entities:
Keywords: Anastomotic leakage; Fluorescence guided surgery; Image guided surgery; Indocyanine green angiography; Near-infrared imaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33942183 PMCID: PMC8921116 DOI: 10.1007/s00464-021-08518-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Endosc ISSN: 0930-2794 Impact factor: 4.584
Fig. 1Examples of the laparoscopic images of partly devascularized small bowel with blinding of the mesentery presented to participants. A White light, B Indocyanine green angiography (both presented as video sequences). C Quantitative analysis of indocyanine green angiography, red indicates the lowest perfusion, black: low perfusion, blue: the maximal perfusion, and green: sufficient perfusion. D Corresponding image for selection of resection lines (Color figure online)
Participant demographics
| Novices ( | Intermediates ( | Experienced ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex, male/female | 9/9 | 7/5 | 13/2 |
| Age, years mean (± SD) | 28.5 (± 3.9) | 38.4 (± 4.9) | 46.9 (± 10.5) |
| Years in surgery, years median (IQR) | 0.5 (0–1.25) | 7 (5–9.75) | 16 (9–38.6) |
| Intestinal resections performed without supervision, median (IQR) | 0 | 7.5 (2–40) | 200 (150–1000) |
| ICG-knowledge, | 3 (16.7%) | 3 (25%) | 8 (53.3%) |
Sensitivity, specificity and positive/negative predictive value of the ability to detect ischemia under the different modalities
| Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV | NPV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WL all | 82.0 (78.4;85.2) | 86.7 (78.1;92.2) | 97.1 (95.1;98.4) | 46.7 (39.3;54.3) |
| ICG all | 85.3 (81.9;88.1) | 97.8 (92.2;99.6) | 99.5 (98.3;99.9) | 54.7 (47.0;62.2) |
| q-ICG all | 97.0 (95.1;98.2) | 83.3 (74.3;89.6) | 97.0 (95.1;98.2) | 83.3 (74.3;89.6) |
| Novices | ||||
| WL | 84.9 (79.2;89.2) | 77.8 (61.9;88.3) | 95.5 (91.3;97.7) | 48.3 (35.9;60.1) |
| ICG | 84.9 (79.2;89.2) | 94.4 (81.9;0.99) | 98.8 (95.8;99.8) | 53.1 (41.1;64.8) |
| q-ICG | 97.0 (93.6;98.6) | 88.9 (94.9;99.2) | 98.0 (94.9;99.2) | 84.2 (69.6;92.6) |
| Intermediate | ||||
| WL | 75.8 (67.8;82.3) | 83.3 (64.2;93.3) | 96.2 (90.5;98.5) | 38.5 (26.5;52.0) |
| ICG | 86.4 (79.5;91.2) | 100 (86.2;100) | 100 (96.7;100) | 57.1 (42.2;70.1) |
| q-ICG | 97.7 (93.5;99.4) | 75.0 (55.1;88.0) | 95.6 (90.6;98.0) | 85.7 (65.4;95.0) |
| Experts | ||||
| WL | 83.6 (77.2;88.5) | 100 (88.7;100) | 100 (97.3;100) | 52.6 (39.9;65.0) |
| ICG | 84.9 (78.6;89.5) | 100 (88.7;100) | 100 (97.3;100) | 54.6 (41.5;67.0) |
| q-ICG | 96.4 (92.3;98.32) | 83.3 (66.4;92.7) | 97.0 (93.1;98.7) | 80.1 (63.7;90.8) |
Values are percentages (CI95%)
WL White light, ICG indocyanine green, q-ICG quantitative indocyanine green, PPV Positive predictive value, NNV negative predictive value
Fig. 2Chi-square of contingency tables of safe/unsafe resections across modalities in each experience group *p = 0.03, **p = 0.034, ***p < 0.001, #p = 0.034
Fig. 3Chi-square of contingency tables of safe/unsafe resections across experience in each modality. *p = 0.020, **p = 0.005, ***p = 0.001
Fig. 4Example of tablet-based q-ICG used during the thoracic part of Ivor-Lewis resection of gastroesophageal cancer. A white light image, B Indocyanine green angiography, C Quantitative analysis of indocyanine green angiography with interactive features. D Color-coded heatmap derived from q-ICG representing relative perfusion. Adapted from [20] with permission from Springer and Langenbeck’s Archive of Surgery (Color figure online)