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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Indocyanine Green–Guided Pediatric Tumor Resection: Approach, Utility, and Challenges

TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the feasibility of ICG-guided tumor resection in common childhood solid tumors such as neuroblastoma, sarcomas, hepatic tumors, pulmonary metastases, and other rare tumors.
Abstract
Incomplete tumor resection increases the risk of local recurrence. However, the standard of care approach to distinguishing tumor tissue is less than optimal, as it depends on a conglomeration of preoperative imaging and visual and tactile indicators in real time. This approach is associated with a significant risk of inadequate resection; therefore, a novel approach that delineates the accurate intraoperative definition of pediatric tumors is urgently needed. To date, there is no reliable method for the intraoperative assessment of tumor extent and real-time differentiation between tumor- involved tissues and tumor-free tissues. Use of intraoperative frozen sections is challenging, time consuming, and covers a small surface area. Increased vascular permeability and impaired lymphatic drainage in the tumor microenvironment leads to an enhanced permeability and retention effect of small molecules. ICG is a fluorescent dye that when administered intravenously accumulates passively in the tumor because of EPR, thereby providing some tumor contrast for intraoperative real-time tumor recognition. Preclinical and clinical studies suggest that the tumor-to-background fluorescence ratio is optimized when imaging is obtained 24 h after dye injection, and many studies suggest using a high dose of ICG to optimize dye retention in the tumor tissue. However, in childhood cancers, little is known about the ideal dosing, applications, and challenges of ICG-guided tumor resection. This retrospective study examines the feasibility of ICG-guided tumor resection in common childhood solid tumors such as neuroblastoma, sarcomas, hepatic tumors, pulmonary metastases, and other rare tumors. Pediatric dosing and challenges related to the optimization of tumor-to-background ratio are also examined.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical Application of Indocyanine Green Fluorescence Imaging in the Resection of Hepatoblastoma: A Single Institution's Experiences

TL;DR: ICG fluorescence imaging is useful in the resection of HB and may detect small lesions not shown in preoperative imaging, as well as identify additional lesions which were not detected inPreoperative imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative Fluorescein Sodium in Pediatric Neurosurgery: A Preliminary Case Series from a Singapore Children’s Hospital

TL;DR: In this article , the use of intraoperative fluorescein sodium (Na-Fl) in pediatric brain tumor surgery was investigated and a single-institution study was conducted for 21 patients with suspected brain tumours.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative Evaluation of Soft Tissue Sarcoma Surgical Margins with Indocyanine Green Fluorescence Imaging

TL;DR: In this article , the authors presented an ongoing, prospective, non-randomized clinical study implementing ICG intraoperative margin assessment in patients with confirmed or suspected soft tissue sarcomas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tumor-Background Ratio is an effective method to identify tumors and false-positive nodules in indocyanine-green navigation surgery for pediatric liver cancer

TL;DR: Indocyanine green navigation surgery is safe and feasible for liver cancer in children, which can enhance the visualization of the tumor during operation and provide more information about the location and boundaries of the tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical advances in the surgical management of Wilms tumors in children

TL;DR: In this article , the authors discuss the current approaches, challenges, opportunities, and future directions of minimally invasive surgery (laparoscopic and robotics), imageguided surgery, and fluorescence-guided surgery.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hand-held Spectroscopic Device for In Vivo and Intraoperative Tumor Detection: Contrast Enhancement, Detection Sensitivity, and Tissue Penetration

TL;DR: In vivo studies using mice bearing bioluminescent 4T1 breast tumors further demonstrate that the tumor borders can be precisely detected preoperatively and intraoperatively, and that the contrast signals are strongly correlated with tumor biolUMinescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative Near-Infrared Optical Imaging Can Localize Gadolinium-Enhancing Gliomas During Surgery.

TL;DR: With the use of Second Window ICG, gadolinium-enhancing tumors can be localized through brain parenchyma intraoperatively and its utility for margin detection is promising but limited by lower specificity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative near-infrared imaging can distinguish cancer from normal tissue but not inflammation.

TL;DR: NIR imaging can identify tumors from normal tissues, provides excellent tissue contrast, and it facilitates the resection of tumors, however, in situations where there is significant peritumoral inflammation, NIR imaging with ICG is not helpful, suggesting that non-targeted NIR dyes that accumulate in hyperpermeable tissues will have significant limitations in the future.
Journal Article

Optimization of the enhanced permeability and retention effect for near-infrared imaging of solid tumors with indocyanine green.

TL;DR: For non-hepatic solid tumors, ICG was optimal when dosed at 5 mg/kg and 24 hours before surgery, and these findings were applicable to lung cancer patients, and tumor was clearly delineated from surrounding normal tissue by NIR imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of breast cancer margins using intraoperative near-infrared imaging

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that near infrared (NIR) intraoperative molecular imaging using systemic indocyanine green (ICG) would be helpful in discerning tumor margins in intraoperative breast cancer margins.
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