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      Multimodal Surgical Guidance during Sentinel Node Biopsy for Melanoma: Combined Gamma Tracing and Fluorescence Imaging of the Sentinel Node through Use of the Hybrid Tracer Indocyanine Green-(99m)Tc-Nanocolloid.

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          Abstract

          Purpose To evaluate the hybrid approach in a large population of patients with melanoma in the head and neck, on the trunk, or on an extremity who were scheduled for sentinel node (SN) biopsy. Materials and Methods This prospective study was approved by the institutional review board. Between March 2010 and March 2013, 104 patients with a melanoma, including 48 women (average age, 54.3 years; range, 18.5-87.4 years) and 56 men (average age, 55.2 years; range, 22.4-77.4 years) (P = .76) were enrolled after obtaining written informed consent. Following intradermal hybrid tracer administration, lymphoscintigraphy and single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography were performed. Blue dye was intradermally injected prior to the start of the surgical operation (excluding patients with a facial melanoma). Intraoperatively, SNs were initially pursued by using gamma tracing followed by fluorescence imaging (FI) and, when applicable, blue-dye detection. A portable gamma camera was used to confirm SN removal. Collected data included number and location of the preoperatively and intraoperatively identified SNs and the intraoperative number of SNs that were radioactive, fluorescent, and blue. A two-sample test for equality of proportions was performed to evaluate differences in intraoperative SN visualization through FI and blue-dye detection. Results Preoperative imaging revealed 2.4 SNs (range, 1-6) per patient. Intraoperatively, 93.8% (286 of 305) of the SNs were radioactive, 96.7% (295 of 305) of the SNs were fluorescent, while only 61.7% (116 of 188) of the SNs stained blue (P < .0001). FI was of value for identification of near-injection-site SNs (two patients), SNs located in complex anatomic areas (head and neck [28 patients]), and SNs that failed to accumulate blue dye (19 patients). Conclusion The hybrid tracer enables both preoperative SN mapping and intraoperative SN identification in melanoma patients. In the setup of this study, optical identification of the SNs through the fluorescent signature of the hybrid tracer was superior compared with blue dye-based SN visualization.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Radiology
          Radiology
          1527-1315
          0033-8419
          May 2015
          : 275
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] From the Interventional Molecular Imaging Laboratory, Department of Radiology (N.S.v.d.B., O.R.B., F.W.B.v.L., R.A.V.O.) and Department of Surgery (B.E.S.), Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands; Department of Nuclear Medicine (N.S.v.d.B., O.R.B., H.M.M., R.A.V.O.), Department of Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology (W.M.C.K., A.J.M.B., F.W.B.v.L.), Department of Biostatistics (H.v.T.), and Department of Surgery and Melanoma Center Amsterdam (O.E.N.), the Netherlands Cancer Institute-Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Maxillofacial Surgery, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands (W.M.C.K., A.J.M.B.); Melanoma Institute Australia, Sydney, Australia (O.E.N.); Sydney Medical School, the University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia (O.E.N.); and Department of Melanoma and Surgical Oncology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia (O.E.N.).
          Article
          10.1148/radiol.14140322
          25521776
          e8fbc0ae-5950-4093-94e1-a6f6dcafdef4
          History

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