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First-in-human validation of a DROP-IN β-probe for robotic radioguided surgery: defining optimal signal-to-background discrimination algorithm.

Authors :
Collamati F
Morganti S
van Oosterom MN
Campana L
Ceci F
Luzzago S
Mancini-Terracciano C
Mirabelli R
Musi G
Nicolanti F
Orsi I
van Leeuwen FWB
Faccini R
Source :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging [Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging] 2024 Aug; Vol. 51 (10), pp. 3098-3108. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Feb 20.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: In radioguided surgery (RGS), radiopharmaceuticals are used to generate preoperative roadmaps (e.g., PET/CT) and to facilitate intraoperative tracing of tracer avid lesions. Within RGS, there is a push toward the use of receptor-targeted radiopharmaceuticals, a trend that also has to align with the surgical move toward minimal invasive robotic surgery. Building on our initial ex vivo evaluation, this study investigates the clinical translation of a DROP-IN β probe in robotic PSMA-guided prostate cancer surgery.<br />Methods: A clinical-grade DROP-IN β probe was developed to support the detection of PET radioisotopes (e.g., <superscript>68</superscript>  Ga). The prototype was evaluated in 7 primary prostate cancer patients, having at least 1 lymph node metastases visible on PSMA-PET. Patients were scheduled for radical prostatectomy combined with extended pelvic lymph node dissection. At the beginning of surgery, patients were injected with 1.1 MBq/kg of [ <superscript>68</superscript> Ga]Ga-PSMA. The β probe was used to trace PSMA-expressing lymph nodes in vivo. To support intraoperative decision-making, a statistical software algorithm was defined and optimized on this dataset to help the surgeon discriminate between probe signals coming from tumors and healthy tissue.<br />Results: The DROP-IN β probe helped provide the surgeon with autonomous and highly maneuverable tracer detection. A total of 66 samples (i.e., lymph node specimens) were analyzed in vivo, of which 31 (47%) were found to be malignant. After optimization of the signal cutoff algorithm, we found a probe detection rate of 78% of the PSMA-PET-positive samples, a sensitivity of 76%, and a specificity of 93%, as compared to pathologic evaluation.<br />Conclusion: This study shows the first-in-human use of a DROP-IN β probe, supporting the integration of β radio guidance and robotic surgery. The achieved competitive sensitivity and specificity help open the world of robotic RGS to a whole new range of radiopharmaceuticals.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1619-7089
Volume :
51
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38376805
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-024-06653-6