Background: Current intraoperative methods of visual inspection and tissue palpation by the surgeon, and frozen section analysis cannot reliably prevent inadequate surgical margins in patients treated for oral squamous-cell carcinoma (OSCC). This study assessed feasibility of MRI for the assessment of surgical resection margins in fresh OSCC specimens. Methods: Ten consecutive tongue specimens containing OSCC were scanned using 3 T clinical whole-body MRI. Two radiologists independently annotated OSCC location and minimal tumor-free margins. Whole-mount histology was the reference standard. Results: The positive predictive values (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) for OSCC localization were 96% and 75%, and 87% and 79% for reader 1 and 2, respectively. The PPV and NPV for identification of margins <5 mm were 38% and 91%, and 5% and 87% for reader 1 and 2, respectively. Conclusions: MRI accurately localized OSCC with high inter-reader agreement in fresh OSCC specimens, but it seemed not yet feasible to accurately assess the surgical margin status.
CITATION STYLE
Heidkamp, J., Weijs, W. L. J., van Engen-van Grunsven, A. C. H., de Laak-de Vries, I., Maas, M. C., Rovers, M. M., … Takes, R. P. (2020). Assessment of surgical tumor-free resection margins in fresh squamous-cell carcinoma resection specimens of the tongue using a clinical MRI system. Head and Neck, 42(8), 2039–2049. https://doi.org/10.1002/hed.26125
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