First experiences with navigated radio-guided surgery using freehand SPECT

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Abstract

Background: Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in melanoma using one-dimensional gamma probes is a standard of care worldwide. Reports on the performance are claimed by most groups to successfully detect the SLNs during the surgical procedure in almost 100% of the patients. In clinical practice, however, several issues remain which are usually not addressed: the difficulty of intraoperative detection of deeply located nodes, SLN detection in obese patients or in the groin and the impossibility to make a scan of the entire wound after SLN resection to avoid false negative testing for eventually remaining SLNs. Materials and Methods: The concept behind freehand SPECT is to combine a gamma probe as used for conventional radio-guided surgery with a tracking system as used in neurosurgical navigation. From this combination and a proper algorithm framework the 3D reconstruction of radioactivity distributions and displaying these intraoperatively is possible. Conclusion: In summary, the feasibility of freehand SPECT could be shown and provides an image-guided SLNB and a truly minimally invasive and optimized surgical procedure. Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Rieger, A., Saeckl, J., Belloni, B., Hein, R., Okur, A., Scheidhauer, K., … Martignoni, M. E. (2011). First experiences with navigated radio-guided surgery using freehand SPECT. Case Reports in Oncology, 4(2), 420–425. https://doi.org/10.1159/000330273

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