Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2019 Nov;161(11):2311-2318. doi: 10.1007/s00701-019-04054-5. Epub 2019 Sep 3.
Intraoperative visualization of brain tumors with near-infrared (NIR)-fluorescent dyes is an emerging method for tumor margin approximation but are limited by existing fluorescence detection platforms. We previously showed that a dedicated NIR imaging platform outperformed a state-of-the-art neurosurgical microscope in fluorescence signal characteristics. This study examined whether conventional neurosurgical microscope NIR signal could be improved with the addition of a narrow wavelength excitation source.
Imaging was conducted with a broad-spectrum neurosurgical microscope and commercial near-infrared module. Addition of an 805-nm laser was used to "boost" NIR excitation of indocyanine green (ICG). In vitro quantification was performed on serial dilutions of ICG. Patients underwent tumor resection with delayed 24-h imaging of ICG infusion. NIR fluorescence of dura, cortex, or tumor was quantified from images prior to (pre-boost) and following added excitation with the laser (post-boost). Signal to background ratio (SBR) of pre- and post-boost was calculated as a readout of image enhancement.
In vitro, excitation boost effected a 29% increase in mean SBR in six serial dilutions of ICG. Intraoperative boost was performed in 11 patients including meningioma, glioblastoma multiforme, and metastases. Increase in tumor fluorescence was pronounced under direct tumor visualization. Across all patients, boost excitation resulted in 35% mean improvement from pre-boost SBR (p < 0.001).
Neurosurgical microscopes remain the preferred method of visualizing tumor during intracranial surgery. However, current modalities for NIR signal detection are suboptimal. We demonstrate that augmentation of a fluorescence microscope module with a focused excitation source is a simple mechanism of improving NIR tumor visualization.
NCT03262636.
近红外(NIR)荧光染料术中可视化脑肿瘤是一种新兴的肿瘤边界逼近方法,但受到现有荧光检测平台的限制。我们之前的研究表明,专用的近红外成像平台在荧光信号特征方面优于最先进的神经外科显微镜。本研究旨在探讨在添加窄波长激发源的情况下,传统神经外科显微镜的近红外信号是否可以得到改善。
使用广谱神经外科显微镜和商用近红外模块进行成像。添加 805nm 激光用于“增强”吲哚菁绿(ICG)的近红外激发。对 ICG 的系列稀释液进行体外定量。患者接受肿瘤切除术,并在 ICG 输注后 24 小时进行延迟成像。在未增强(预增强)和激光增强(后增强)前对硬脑膜、皮层或肿瘤的近红外荧光进行定量。计算预增强和后增强的信号与背景比(SBR)作为图像增强的读数。
在体外,激发增强使六个 ICG 系列稀释液的平均 SBR 增加了 29%。在 11 名患者中进行了术中增强,包括脑膜瘤、胶质母细胞瘤多形性和转移瘤。在直接观察肿瘤时,肿瘤荧光增强明显。在所有患者中,增强激发使预增强 SBR 的平均改善率达到 35%(p<0.001)。
神经外科显微镜仍然是颅内手术中观察肿瘤的首选方法。然而,目前的近红外信号检测方法并不理想。我们证明,通过聚焦激发源增强荧光显微镜模块是一种简单的改善近红外肿瘤可视化的机制。
NCT03262636。