1 research outputs found
Intraoperative fluorescence diagnosis in the brain: a systematic review and suggestions for future standards on reporting diagnostic accuracy and clinical utility
Background Surgery for gliomas is often confounded by difficulties in distinguishing tumor from surrounding normal brain. For
better discrimination, intraoperative optical imaging methods using fluorescent dyes are currently being explored.
Understandably, such methods require the demonstration of a high degree of diagnostic accuracy and clinical benefit.
Currently, clinical utility is determined by tissue biopsies which are correlated to optical signals, and quantified using measures
such as sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive values, and negative predictive values. In addition, surgical outcomes, such as
extent of resection rates and/or survival (progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS)) have been measured. These
assessments, however, potentially involve multiple biases and confounders, which have to be minimized to ensure reproducibility, generalizability and comparability of test results. Test should aim at having a high internal and external validity. The objective
of this article is to analyze how diagnostic accuracy and outcomes are utilized in available studies describing intraoperative
imaging and furthermore, to derive recommendations for reliable and reproducible evaluations.
Methods A review of the literature was performed for assessing the use of measures of diagnostic accuracy and outcomes of
intraoperative optical imaging methods. From these data, we derive recommendations for designing and reporting future studies.
Results Available literature indicates that potential confounders and biases for reporting the diagnostic accuracy and usefulness of
intraoperative optical imaging methods are seldom accounted for. Furthermore, methods for bias reduction are rarely used nor
reported.
Conclusions Detailed, transparent, and uniform reporting on diagnostic accuracy of intraoperative imaging methods is necessary.
In the absence of such reporting, studies will not be comparable or reproducible. Future studies should consider some of the
recommendations given here