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Intraoperative

Authors :
Leubet Yirga
Christoph Rischpler
Wolfgang P. Fendler
Ken Herrmann
Ina Binse
Boris Hadaschik
Claudia Kesch
Christopher Darr
Christine Praus
Johannes Haubold
Maarten Grootendorst
Nina Harke
Pedro Fragoso Costa
Thomas Hager
Jan Philipp Radtke
Henning Reis
Source :
J Nucl Med
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Our objective was to assess the feasibility and accuracy of Cerenkov luminescence imaging (CLI) for assessment of surgical margins intraoperatively during radical prostatectomy. Methods: A single-center feasibility study included 10 patients with high-risk primary prostate cancer (PC). (68)Ga-prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET/CT scans were performed followed by radical prostatectomy and intraoperative CLI of the excised prostate. In addition to imaging the intact prostate, in the first 2 patients the prostate gland was incised and imaged with CLI to visualize the primary tumor. We compared the tumor margin status on CLI to postoperative histopathology. Measured CLI intensities were determined as tumor-to-background ratio. Results: Tumor cells were successfully detected on the incised prostate CLI images as confirmed by histopathology. Three of 10 men had histopathologically positive surgical margins (PSMs), and 2 of 3 PSMs were accurately detected on CLI. Overall, 25 (72%) of 35 regions of interest proved to visualize a tumor signal according to standard histopathology. The median tumor radiance in these areas was 11,301 photons/s/cm(2)/sr (range, 3,328–25,428 photons/s/cm(2)/sr), and median tumor-to-background ratio was 4.2 (range, 2.1–11.6). False-positive signals were seen mainly at the prostate base, with PC cells overlaid by benign tissue. PSMA immunohistochemistry revealed strong PSMA staining of benign gland tissue, which impacts measured activities. Conclusion: This feasibility showed that (68)Ga-PSMA CLI is a new intraoperative imaging technique capable of imaging the entire specimen’s surface to detect PC tissue at the resection margin. Further optimization of the CLI protocol, or the use of lower-energy imaging tracers such as (18)F-PSMA, is required to reduce false-positives. A larger study will be performed to assess diagnostic performance.

Details

ISSN :
15355667
Volume :
61
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82583e929e003e557ce7bdb367710e7b