학술논문

Video-assisted thoracoscopic indocyanine green fluorescence imaging system shows sentinel lymph nodes in non–small-cell lung cancer
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. Jan 01, 2011 141(1):141-144
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0022-5223
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:: The primary objective was to assess the feasibility and accuracy of intraoperative sentinel lymph node mapping by using a video-assisted thoracoscopic indocyanine green fluorescence imaging system in patients with clinical stage I non–small-cell lung cancer. METHODS:: Thirty-one patients who underwent operation between January 2009 and September 2009 were investigated for sentinel node biopsy. Indocyanine green fluorescence imaging was applied by an infrared light charge-coupled device, and sentinel nodes were identified intraoperatively and dissected. Histologic examination by hematoxylin-eosin staining was used to evaluate metastases. RESULTS:: Sentinel lymph nodes were identified by segmentectomy in 11 of 14 patients (78.5%) and by lobectomy in 14 of 17 patients (82.4%). The total identification rate was 80.7% (25/31 patients), the false-negative rate was 0% (0/24 patients), and the overall accuracy rate was 80.7% (25/31 patients). CONCLUSION:: Video-assisted thoracoscopic indocyanine green fluorescence image-guided surgery is feasible for sentinel node biopsy and may be a powerful tool to eliminate unnecessary lymph node dissection in patients with lung cancer.