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Comparison of narrow band and fluorescence molecular imaging to improve intraoperative tumour margin assessment in oral cancer surgery

Authors :
Jaron G. de Wit
Jeroen E. van Schaik
Floris J. Voskuil
Jasper Vonk
Sebastiaan A.H.J. de Visscher
Kees-Pieter Schepman
Bernard F.A.M. van der Laan
Jan J. Doff
Bert van der Vegt
Boudewijn E.C. Plaat
Max J.H. Witjes
Man, Biomaterials and Microbes (MBM)
Damage and Repair in Cancer Development and Cancer Treatment (DARE)
Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
​Basic and Translational Research and Imaging Methodology Development in Groningen (BRIDGE)
Targeted Gynaecologic Oncology (TARGON)
Source :
Oral Oncology, 134:106099. ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Objective: New techniques have emerged to aid in preventing inadequate margins in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) surgery, but studies comparing different techniques are lacking. Here, we compared narrow band imaging (NBI) with fluorescence molecular imaging (FMI), to study which intraoperative technique best assesses the mucosal tumour margins.Materials and Methods: NBI was performed in vivo and borders were marked with three sutures. For FMI, patients received 75 mg of unlabelled cetuximab followed by 15 mg cetuximab-800CW intravenously-two days prior to surgery. The FMI borders were defined on the excised specimen. The NBI borders were correlated with the FMI outline and histopathology.Results: Sixteen patients were included, resulting in 31 NBI and 30 FMI measurements. The mucosal border was delineated within 1 mm of the tumour border in 4/31 (13 %) of NBI and in 16/30 (53 %) FMI cases (p = 0.0008), and within 5 mm in 23/31 (74 %) of NBI and in 29/30 (97 %) of FMI cases (p = 0.0048). The median distance between the tumour border and the imaging border was significantly greater for NBI (3.2 mm, range −6.1 to 12.8 mm) than for FMI (0.9 mm, range −3.0 to 7.4 mm; p = 0.028). Submucosal extension and previous irradiation reduced NBI accuracy.Conclusion: Ex vivo FMI performed more accurately than in vivo NBI in mucosal margin assessment, mainly because NBI cannot detect submucosal extension. NBI adequately identified the mucosal margin especially in early-stage and not previously irradiated tumours, and may therefore be preferable in these tumours for practical and cost-related reasons.

Details

ISSN :
13688375
Volume :
134
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oral Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0673eed8682bad120e56a3c6e94e4137
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oraloncology.2022.106099