Abstract

IntroductionA current challenge for endometriosis surgery is to correctly identify the localizations of disease, especially when small or hidden (occult endometriosis), and to exactly define their real extension. The use of near-infrared radiation imaging (NIR) after injection of indocyanine green (ICG) represents one of the most encouraging method. The aim of this study is to assess the diagnostic value of NIR-ICG imaging in the surgical treatment of endometriosis compared with the standard of treatment.Material and MethodsThe Gre-Endo trial is a prospective, single-arm study (NCT03332004). After exploring the operatory field using the white light (WL) mode, patients were injected with ICG and then observed in NIR mode. All suspected areas were classified and chronicled according to lesions visualized only in WL, NIR-ICG, or in the combination of both. Lesion not visualized in WL was considered as suspect occult lesion (s-OcL). In addition, a random control biopsy from an apparent negative peritoneum visualized in WL and NIR-ICG imaging was taken for all patients (control cases). All lesions removed were considered “suspect endometriosis” until pathology.ResultsFifty-one patients were enrolled between January 2016 and October 2019. A total of 240 suspected lesions have been identified with both methods (WL + NIR-ICG). Two hundred and seven (86.2%) lesions out of the overall 240 were visualized with WL imaging, and 200 were confirmed to be pathologic (true positive for WL). The remaining 33/240 (13.75%) (false negative for WL) lesions were identified only with NIR-ICG imaging and collected as s-OcL. All 33 s-OcLs removed were confirmed to be pathologic (c-OcL = 100%). NIR-ICG vision showed PPV of 98.5%, NPV of 87.1%, Se of 87%, and Sp of 98.5%, confirming that this kind of imaging is an excellent diagnostic and screening test (p = 0.001 and p = 0.835, according to McNemar’s and Cohen’s kappa tests, respectively).ConclusionsThe use of NIR-ICG vision alone and combined with WL showed good results in intraoperative detection rate and fluorescence-guided surgery of endometriosis. Furthermore, NIR-ICG allowed surgeons to remove occult lesions that otherwise would remain, leading to possible greater postoperative pain and a higher risk of persistence and relapse.

Highlights

  • A current challenge for endometriosis surgery is to correctly identify the localizations of disease, especially when small or hidden, and to exactly define their real extension

  • The aim of this study is to assess the diagnostic value of NIRICG imaging in the surgical treatment of endometriosis compared with the standard of treatment, that is laparoscopy in white light (WL), and the standard diagnostic method, that is pathologic finding

  • The near-infrared radiation imaging (NIR)-indocyanine green (ICG) camera system adopted for the study was the Olympus ICG Imaging System Prototype based on the VISERA Pro System, the merchandized camera head CH-S200XZ-EB connected to VISERA ELITE II system with NIR filter (Olympus Europa Holding GmbH, Hamburg, Germany), and the IMAGE1 STM Rubina imaging technology from KARL STORZ

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A current challenge for endometriosis surgery is to correctly identify the localizations of disease, especially when small or hidden (occult endometriosis), and to exactly define their real extension. Surgical treatment can improve quality of life and fertility by radically removing extra-ovarian endometriosis localizations using the best minimally invasive techniques such as laparoscopy, the current gold standard of treatment [2,3,4]. Technical difficulties have been overcome by surgeon experience and the refinement of techniques; a frequent current challenge involves identifying endometriosis localizations, especially when small or hidden (occult endometriosis) [5,6,7,8,9], to not leave out disease and determine a possible “undertreatment” and/or to predispose patients to possible recurrences. The excessive dissection and resection of heathy tissues surrounding the diseased, could determine postoperative surgical and functional morbidity [10,11,12,13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call