van den Berg Nynke S, Engelen Thijs, Brouwer Oscar R, Mathéron Hanna M, Valdés-Olmos Renato A, Nieweg Omgo E, van Leeuwen Fijs W B
aInterventional Molecular Imaging Laboratory, Department of Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden Departments of bUrology cNuclear Medicine dSurgery and Melanoma Center Amsterdam, and eHead and Neck Surgery and Oncology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital, Amsterdam, The Netherlands fMelanoma Institute Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Nucl Med Commun. 2016 Aug;37(8):812-7. doi: 10.1097/MNM.0000000000000524.
To explore the feasibility of an intraoperative navigation technology based on preoperatively acquired single photon emission computed tomography combined with computed tomography (SPECT/CT) images during sentinel node (SN) biopsy in patients with melanoma or Merkel cell carcinoma.
Patients with a melanoma (n=4) or Merkel cell carcinoma (n=1) of a lower extremity scheduled for wide re-excision of the primary lesion site and SN biopsy were studied. Following a Tc-nanocolloid injection and lymphoscintigraphy, SPECT/CT images were acquired with a reference target (ReTp) fixed on the leg or the iliac spine. Intraoperatively, a sterile ReTp was placed at the same site to enable SPECT/CT-based mixed-reality navigation of a gamma ray detection probe also containing a reference target (ReTgp).The accuracy of the navigation procedure was determined in the coronal plane (x, y-axis) by measuring the discrepancy between standard gamma probe-based SN localization and mixed-reality-based navigation to the SN. To determine the depth accuracy (z-axis), the depth estimation provided by the navigation system was compared to the skin surface-to-node distance measured in the computed tomography component of the SPECT/CT images.
In four of five patients, it was possible to navigate towards the preoperatively defined SN. The average navigational error was 8.0 mm in the sagittal direction and 8.5 mm in the coronal direction. Intraoperative sterile ReTp positioning and tissue movement during surgery exerted a distinct influence on the accuracy of navigation.
Intraoperative navigation during melanoma or Merkel cell carcinoma surgery is feasible and can provide the surgeon with an interactive 3D roadmap towards the SN or SNs in the groin. However, further technical optimization of the modality is required before this technology can become routine practice.
探讨在黑色素瘤或默克尔细胞癌患者前哨淋巴结(SN)活检过程中,基于术前获取的单光子发射计算机断层扫描与计算机断层扫描(SPECT/CT)图像的术中导航技术的可行性。
对计划进行原发灶广泛切除和SN活检的下肢黑色素瘤患者(n = 4)或默克尔细胞癌患者(n = 1)进行研究。注射锝标记纳米胶体并进行淋巴闪烁显像后,固定在腿部或髂嵴上的参考靶点(ReTp)获取SPECT/CT图像。术中,在同一部位放置无菌ReTp,以便对同样包含参考靶点(ReTgp)的伽马射线探测探头进行基于SPECT/CT的混合现实导航。通过测量基于标准伽马探头的SN定位与基于混合现实的SN导航之间的差异,在冠状面(x、y轴)确定导航程序的准确性。为了确定深度准确性(z轴),将导航系统提供的深度估计与SPECT/CT图像的计算机断层扫描部分测量的皮肤表面到淋巴结的距离进行比较。
五名患者中有四名能够导航至术前确定的SN。矢状方向的平均导航误差为8.0毫米,冠状方向为8.5毫米。术中无菌ReTp定位和手术过程中的组织移动对导航准确性有显著影响。
黑色素瘤或默克尔细胞癌手术中的术中导航是可行的,可为外科医生提供一条通向腹股沟区一个或多个SN的交互式三维路线图。然而,在该技术成为常规操作之前,需要对其进行进一步的技术优化。