Debridement of the surgical site during open fracture reduction and internal fixation is important for preventing surgical site infection; the risk of subsequent fracture-associated infection for a particular area of tissue is assessed by the surgeon based on multi-level variables, including demographics and laboratory results. Intraoperative fluorescence imaging can contribute additional information at a more localized level. Here we present a fluorescence-based predictive model using features from dynamic contrast enhanced-fluorescence imaging (DCE-FI), as well as patient-level variables associated with infection risk. Regions-of-interest were selected from thirty-eight enrolled open fracture patients. Spatial and kinetic features were extracted from DCE-FI, and combined with patient infection risk factor describing the possibility of getting surgical-site-infection. The model was evaluated for ability to predict composite outcome scores—intra-operative surgeon assessment coupled with post-operative confirmed infection outcome. This proposed model demonstrates high predictive performance with an accuracy of 0.86, evaluated with a cross-validation approach, and is a promising approach for early and quick identification of tissue prone to infection.
Curative surgery for other many cancers requires that the tumor be removed with a zone of normal tissue surrounding the tumor with ‘negative’ margins. Sarcomas, cancers of the bones, muscles, and fat, require WLE for cure. Unfortunately, ‘positive’ margins occur in 20-25% of sarcoma surgeries, associated with cancer recurrence and reduced survival. Our group successfully tested a small-molecule fluorophore (ABY-029) in sarcomas that targets the epidermal growth factor receptor. We sought to evaluate human sarcoma xenografts for epidermal growth factor receptor expression and binding of ABY-029 with and without exposure to standard presurgical chemotherapy and radiation. We inoculated groups of 24 NSG mice with five cell lines (120 mice total). Eight mice from each cell line received: 1) radiation alone; 2) chemotherapy alone; or 3) chemotherapy and radiation. We administered ABY-029 2-4 hours before surgery. Tumor and biopsy portions of background tissues were removed. All tissues were imaged on a LI-COR Odyssey and processed in pathology. There were no significant reductions in epidermal growth factor receptor expression or in ABY-029-mediated fluorescence in tumors exposed to chemotherapy, radiation, or both. fluorescence-guided surgery demonstrates strong promise to improve curative surgical cancer care, particularly for sarcomas where the positive margin rate is substantial. Fluorophore performance must be evaluated under circumstances that duplicate accurately the biological milieu relevant to a particular cancer. This work shows that human sarcoma xenografts subjected to standard therapies do not demonstrate a change in epidermal growth factor receptor expression or in epidermal growth factor receptor-targeted fluorescence, thereby indicating that epidermal growth factor receptor-targeted fluorescence-guided surgery should be feasible under normal therapeutic conditions in the clinic.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.