Kennedy Gregory T, Okusanya Olugbenga T, Keating Jane J, Heitjan Daniel F, Deshpande Charuhas, Litzky Leslie A, Albelda Steven M, Drebin Jeffrey A, Nie Shuming, Low Philip S, Singhal Sunil
*Department of Surgery, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA †Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA ‡Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA §Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA ¶Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Chemistry, Emory University, Atlanta, GA ||Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN.
Ann Surg. 2015 Oct;262(4):602-9. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000001452.
With increasing use of chest computed tomography scans, indeterminate pulmonary nodules are frequently detected as an incidental finding and present a diagnostic challenge. Tissue biopsy followed by histological review and immunohistochemistry is the gold standard to obtain a diagnosis and the most common malignant finding is a primary lung adenocarcinoma. Our objective was to determine whether an intraoperative optical biopsy (molecular imaging) may provide an alternative approach for determining if a pulmonary nodule is a primary lung adenocarcinoma.
Before surgery, 30 patients with an indeterminate pulmonary nodule were intravenously administered a folate receptor-targeted fluorescent contrast agent specific for primary lung adenocarcinomas. During surgery, the nodule was removed and the presence of fluorescence (optical biopsy) was assessed in the operating room to determine if the nodule was a primary pulmonary adenocarcinoma. Standard-of-care frozen section and immunohistochemical staining on permanent sections were then performed as the gold standard to validate the results of the optical biopsy.
Optical biopsies identified 19 of 19 (100%) primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas. There were no false positive or false negative diagnoses. An optical biopsy required 2.4 minutes compared to 26.5 minutes for frozen section (P < 0.001) and it proved more accurate than frozen section in diagnosing lung adenocarcinomas.
An optical biopsy has excellent positive predictive value for intraoperative diagnosis of primary lung adenocarcinomas. With refinement, this technology may prove to be an important supplement to standard pathology for examining close surgical margins, identifying lymph node involvement, and determining whether suspicious nodules are malignant.
随着胸部计算机断层扫描的使用日益增加,不明原因的肺结节经常作为偶然发现被检测到,这带来了诊断挑战。组织活检,随后进行组织学检查和免疫组化是获得诊断的金标准,最常见的恶性发现是原发性肺腺癌。我们的目的是确定术中光学活检(分子成像)是否可以为确定肺结节是否为原发性肺腺癌提供另一种方法。
手术前,30例不明原因肺结节患者静脉注射一种针对原发性肺腺癌的叶酸受体靶向荧光造影剂。手术期间,切除结节并在手术室评估荧光的存在(光学活检),以确定结节是否为原发性肺腺癌。然后进行标准的术中冰冻切片和永久切片的免疫组化染色作为金标准,以验证光学活检的结果。
光学活检在19例原发性肺腺癌中识别出19例(100%)。没有假阳性或假阴性诊断。光学活检需要2.4分钟,而冰冻切片需要26.5分钟(P<0.001),并且在诊断肺腺癌方面比冰冻切片更准确。
光学活检对原发性肺腺癌的术中诊断具有出色的阳性预测价值。随着技术的完善,这项技术可能会成为标准病理学的重要补充,用于检查手术切缘、识别淋巴结受累情况以及确定可疑结节是否为恶性。