1. Tracer-cocktail injections for combined pre- and intraoperative multimodal imaging of lymph nodes in a spontaneous mouse prostate tumor model
- Author
-
Lenka Vermeeren, Henk G. van de Poel, Renato A. Valdés Olmos, Tessa Buckle, Anne C. van Leeuwen, Fijs W. B. van Leeuwen, Gavin Bendle, AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, and Ear, Nose and Throat
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopy ,genetic structures ,Sentinel lymph node ,Biomedical Engineering ,Contrast Media ,Adenocarcinoma ,Single-photon emission computed tomography ,Injections ,Biomaterials ,Mice ,Prostate cancer ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prostate ,medicine ,Animals ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Radioisotopes ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,eye diseases ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Surgery, Computer-Assisted ,chemistry ,Lymph Nodes ,Lymph ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Indocyanine green - Abstract
To improve surgical guidance toward prostate draining lymph nodes, we investigate the potential of intraoperative fluorescence imaging and combined pre- and intraoperative multimodality imaging approaches. Transgenic adenocarcinoma mouse prostate mice with spontaneous prostate tumors are injected intratumorally with: 1. a cocktail of patent blue (Pb) and indocyanine green (ICG); 2. a cocktail of albumin radiocolloids (99mTc-NanoColl), Pb, and ICG; or 3. a cocktail of radiolabeled albumin (99mTc-Vasculosis), Pb, and ICG. The distribution of these imaging agents over the lymph nodes (LNs) are studied at different time points after injection. We find that at 60-min postinjection, ICG significantly improves the detection of the LNs compared to Pb, 53 versus 7%, respectively. Moreover, a cocktail of ICG and 99mTc-NanoColl improves the fluorescent detection rate to 86%, equalling that of the clinically applied 99mTc-NanoColl. A similar overlap is observed in our initial clinical pilot data. Fluorescent detection of the LNs using a ICG with 99mTc-Vasculosis gives similar results as "free" ICG (58%; 60 min). A 99mTc-NanoColl, Pb, and cocktail ICG enriches the standard 99mTc-NanoColl approach by adding optical detection of the sentinel lymph nodes. Furthermore, this approach improves fluorescent-based guidance and enables both accurate surgical planning and intraoperative detection, based on a single injection.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF