Frontiers in Surgery (Jan 2023)

Indocyanine green near-infrared imaging-guided lymph node dissection during oesophageal cancer surgery: A single-centre experience

  • Saihua Chen,
  • Xiaofeng Tian,
  • Guanjun Ju,
  • Minxin Shi,
  • Yibiao Chen,
  • Qing Wang,
  • Wencheng Dai,
  • Tinghua Li,
  • Jing Pan,
  • Yihui Fan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.982306
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate the feasibility of using indocyanine green (ICG) near-infrared (NIR) imaging during lymphadenectomy for oesophageal cancer.MethodsEighty-seven patients with primary oesophageal cancer were enrolled in this study. All the enrolled patients received an endoscopic injection of ICG between 40 min and 23 h before surgery. Nodal dissection during surgery was performed under fluorescence imaging visualisation, with the NIR signal shown in purple. ICG+ or ICG− nodes were recorded station by station and were microscopically evaluated.ResultsEndoscopic peritumoral ICG injection was successfully performed in all patients. Major post-surgery complications included wound infection, pleural effusion, dysphonia, pneumonia and anastomotic fistula. No patients experienced ICG-related adverse events. A total of 2,584 lymph nodes were removed, and the mean number of lymph nodes for each patient was 29.70 ± 9.24. Most of the removed nodes (97.83%) were ICG+, and 3.32% of the ICG+ nodes were metastatic. No metastatic nodes were ICG− or belonged to an ICG− lymph node station. The time from ICG injection to surgery did not affect the number of harvested lymph nodes.ConclusionsThe use of ICG-NIR imaging during oesophageal cancer surgery can enhance the visualisation of lymph nodes during surgery. It is a feasible, safe and helpful technique for lymphadenectomy.

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