Abstract

Partial nephrectomy is now the preferred surgical option for small renal tumors because it allows nephron preservation without compromising oncologic clearance. Its outcomes depend on the surgeon's ability to continuously identify the edges of the tumor during resection, thus leaving an adequate margin around the tumor without excessive removal of normal parenchyma, as well as keeping a short ischemic time. Folate receptors are highly abundant in the normal kidney, and there is a difference in folate receptor expression between malignant and normal renal tissues. Thus, the use of fluorescent agents that target folate receptors should result in differential fluorescence between the tumor and surrounding parenchyma during partial nephrectomy, which, in turn, helps tumor demarcation for identification and resection. A phase 2 study on the novel use of OTL38 in robot-assisted laparoscopic partial nephrectomy is currently in progress in our institution. The outcomes of the first three cases have shown the possible advantages of OTL38 in intraoperative tumor identification before resection and recognition of residual disease in the surrounding parenchyma after resection. The tumors typically appeared dark while the surrounding parenchyma showed brighter fluorescence. Immediately after tumor resection, the margins of all the specimens appeared to have a uniformly bright fluorescence, suggestive of an intact margin of normal renal parenchyma along the plane of excision. The pattern of intraoperative fluorescence correlates well with immunohistochemistry. No OTL38-related adverse effects have been seen among these three patients. We present the outcomes of these three cases, illustrated with intraoperative and immunohistochemistry images.

Highlights

  • Both partial nephrectomy and radical nephrectomy for small renal tumors show similar oncologic outcomes.[1,2] With increasing evidence showing poorer renal function and negative cardiovascular effects after radical nephrectomy, the role of partial nephrectomy as the first-line surgical option is widely accepted.[2,3] Well-performed partial nephrectomies should include two routine criteria: a negative margin without excessive removal of surrounding normal parenchyma and a short warm ischemic time

  • Folate receptors are highly abundant in the normal kidney, and there is a difference in folate receptor expression between malignant and normal renal tissues

  • The entire phase 2 study involves a total of 20 patients in 2 arms, with 10 having localized renal-cell carcinoma (RCC) for robot-assisted laparoscopic partial nephrectomy (RALPN) and 10 having locally advanced or metastatic RCC for open or robot-assisted laparoscopic radical nephrectomy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Both partial nephrectomy and radical nephrectomy for small renal tumors show similar oncologic outcomes.[1,2] With increasing evidence showing poorer renal function and negative cardiovascular effects after radical nephrectomy, the role of partial nephrectomy as the first-line surgical option is widely accepted.[2,3] Well-performed partial nephrectomies should include two routine criteria: a negative margin without excessive removal of surrounding normal parenchyma and a short warm ischemic time. Besides three-dimensional laparoscopic vision and added dexterity, the use of robotic assistance in partial nephrectomy has the added advantage of having various imaging and filter systems to possibly help with visual demarcation of tumors from normal renal parenchyma.[6,7] One such example is nearinfrared fluorescence imaging It involves the activation of an exogenous fluorescent tracer resulting in light emission in the near-infrared spectrum, which is captured by a built-in charge-coupled device camera.[8,9] The differential fluorescent glow in the tumor and normal renal parenchyma aids tumor excision with a margin and detection of residual tumors in the surgical field. There are many exogenous fluorescent tracers that are suitable for near-infrared fluorescence imaging, with the most widely studied being indocyanine green.[8]

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