Purpose: Radioguided surgery has been widely used for clinical procedures such as sentinel node resections. In the (robot-assisted) laparoscopic setting radioguidance is realized using laparoscopic gamma probes, which have limited maneuverability. To increase the rotational freedom, a tethered DROP-IN gamma probe was designed. Here we present the first in vivo feasibility study of this technology in prostate cancer patients. Methods: Ten patients scheduled for a sentinel node procedure received four injections into the prostate with (indocyanine green-)99mTechnetium-nanocolloid and underwent preoperative imaging (lymphoscintigraphy and SPECT/CT). The DROP-IN probe was inserted via the assistant port, still permitting the insertion and usage of additional laparoscopic tools. Results: The sentinel nodes were resected using the da Vinci® Si robot under guidance of DROP-IN gamma tracing and fluorescence imaging. The surgeon was able to independently maneuver the DROP-IN probe using the ProGrasp® forceps of the da Vinci® robot and distinguish sentinel nodes from background signal (such as the injection site). Conclusions: Overall the DROP-IN design proves to be a valuable tool for robot-assisted radioguided surgery approaches.
CITATION STYLE
Meershoek, P., van Oosterom, M. N., Simon, H., Mengus, L., Maurer, T., van Leeuwen, P. J., … van Leeuwen, F. W. B. (2019). Robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery using DROP-IN radioguidance: first-in-human translation. European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 46(1), 49–53. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-018-4095-z
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