Nature Communications (Aug 2023)

EGFR-targeted fluorescence molecular imaging for intraoperative margin assessment in oral cancer patients: a phase II trial

  • Jaron G. de Wit,
  • Jasper Vonk,
  • Floris J. Voskuil,
  • Sebastiaan A. H. J. de Visscher,
  • Kees-Pieter Schepman,
  • Wouter T. R. Hooghiemstra,
  • Matthijs D. Linssen,
  • Sjoerd G. Elias,
  • Gyorgy B. Halmos,
  • Boudewijn E. C. Plaat,
  • Jan J. Doff,
  • Eben L. Rosenthal,
  • Dominic Robinson,
  • Bert van der Vegt,
  • Wouter B. Nagengast,
  • Gooitzen M. van Dam,
  • Max J. H. Witjes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40324-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Inadequate surgical margins occur frequently in oral squamous cell carcinoma surgery. Fluorescence molecular imaging (FMI) has been explored for intraoperative margin assessment, but data are limited to phase-I studies. In this single-arm phase-II study (NCT03134846), our primary endpoints were to determine the sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value of cetuximab-800CW for tumor-positive margins detection. Secondary endpoints were safety, close margin detection rate and intrinsic cetuximab-800CW fluorescence. In 65 patients with 66 tumors, cetuximab-800CW was well-tolerated. Fluorescent spots identified in the surgical margin with signal-to-background ratios (SBR) of ≥2 identify tumor-positive margins with 100% sensitivity, 85.9% specificity, 58.3% positive predictive value, and 100% negative predictive value. An SBR of ≥1.5 identifies close margins with 70.3% sensitivity, 76.1% specificity, 60.5% positive predictive value, and 83.1% negative predictive value. Performing frozen section analysis aimed at the fluorescent spots with an SBR of ≥1.5 enables safe, intraoperative adjustment of surgical margins.