460 research outputs found

    A multimodality localization technique for radio-guided surgery

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Intraoperative localization of image or endoscopy-detected lesions occasionally pose surgical challenges due to the small lesion size and/or difficult anatomic exposure. Identification of such lesions can be facilitated using a hand-held gamma probe with utilization of Tc-99m macroaggregate albumen (MAA) localization technique. The radiopharmaceutical injection can be performed using ultrasound (US) or endoscopy guidance.</p> <p>Case presentations</p> <p>The clinical use of the Tc-99m MAA protocol gamma probe-guided surgery was discussed in three representative cases. Surgical indication was diagnostic exploration in two patients with suspicious lymphadenopathy, and determination of extent of surgical resection in a patient with polyposis. Lesion localization with 100 microcurie (3.7 MBq) Tc-99m MAA prior to surgical exploration resulted in definitive localization of lesions intraoperatively.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The use Tc-99m MAA deposition technique at the site of surgical target is a highly efficient radio-guided surgery technique with definitive impact on the success of surgical exploration in selected indications.</p

    Development of sentinel node localization and ROLL in breast cancer in Europe

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    The concept of a precise region in which to find the lymph nodes that drain the lymph directly from the primary tumor site can be traced back to a century ago to the observations of Jamieson and Dobson who described how cancer cells spread from cancer of the stomach in a single lymph node, which they called the â\u80\u9cprimary glandâ\u80\u9d. However, Cabanas was the first in 1977 to realize the importance of this concept in clinical studies following lymphography performed in patients with penile cancer. Thanks to Mortonâ\u80\u99s studies on melanoma in 1992, we began to understand the potential impact of the sentinel lymph node (SN) on the surgical treatment of this type of cancer. The use of a vital dye (blue dye) administered subdermally in the region surrounding the melanoma lesion led to the identification of the sentinel node, and the vital dye technique was subsequently applied to other types of solid tumors, e.g. breast, vulva. However, difficulties in using this technique in anatomical regions with deep lymphatic vessels, e.g. axilla, led to the development of lymphoscintigraphy, started by Alex and Krag in 1993 on melanoma and breast cancer and optimized by our group at European Institute of Oncology (IEO) in Milan in 1996. Today, lymphoscintigraphy is still considered as the most reliable method for the detection of the SN. In 1996, a new method for the localization of non-palpable breast lesion called radioguided occult lesion localization (ROLL) was also developed at IEO. Retrospective and prospective studies have since shown that the ROLL procedure permits the easy and accurate surgical removal of non-palpable breast lesions, overcoming the limitations of previous techniques such as the wire-guided localization. The purpose of this paper is to describe the evolution of SN biopsy and radioguided surgery in the management of breast cancer. We also include a review of the literature on the clinical scenarios in which SN biopsy in breast cancer is currently used, with particular reference to controversies and future prospects
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