Frontiers in Oncology (Dec 2021)

Frozen Section Analysis and Real-Time Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Surgical Specimen Oriented on 3D Printed Tongue Model to Assess Surgical Margins in Oral Tongue Carcinoma: Preliminary Results

  • Caterina Giannitto,
  • Giuseppe Mercante,
  • Giuseppe Mercante,
  • Luca Disconzi,
  • Luca Disconzi,
  • Riccardo Boroni,
  • Elena Casiraghi,
  • Federica Canzano,
  • Michele Cerasuolo,
  • Francesca Gaino,
  • Armando De Virgilio,
  • Armando De Virgilio,
  • Barbara Fiamengo,
  • Fabio Ferreli,
  • Fabio Ferreli,
  • Andrea Alessandro Esposito,
  • Paolo Oliva,
  • Flavio Ronzoni,
  • Luigi Terracciano,
  • Luigi Terracciano,
  • Giuseppe Spriano,
  • Giuseppe Spriano,
  • Luca Balzarini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.735002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundA surgical margin is the apparently healthy tissue around a tumor which has been removed. In oral cavity carcinoma, a negative margin is considered ≥ 5 mm, a close margin between 1 and 5 mm, and a positive margin ≤ 1 mm. Currently, the intraoperative surgical margin status is based on the visual inspection and tissue palpation by the surgeon and intraoperative histopathological assessment of the resection margins by frozen section analysis (FSA). FSA technique is limited and susceptible to sampling errors. Definitive information on the deep resection margins requires postoperative histopathological analysis.MethodsWe described a novel approach for the assessment of intraoperative surgical margins by examining a surgical specimen oriented through a 3D-printed specific patient tongue with real-time Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). We reported the preliminary results of a case series of 10 patients, prospectively enrolled, with oral tongue carcinoma who underwent surgery between February 2020 and April 2021. Two radiologists with 5 and 10 years of experience, respectively, in Head and Neck radiology in consensus evaluated specimen MRI and measured the distance between the tumor and the specimen surface. We performed intraoperative bedside FSA. To compare the performance of bedside FSA and MRI in predicting definitive margin status we computed the weighted sensitivity (SE), specificity (SP), accuracy (ACC), area under the ROC curve (AUC), F1-score, Positive Predictive Value (PPV), and Negative Predictive Value (NPV). To express the concordance between FSA and ex-vivo MRI we reported the jaccard index.ResultsIntraoperative bedside FSA showed SE of 90%, SP of 100%, F1 of 95%, ACC of 0.9%, PPV of 100%, NPV (not a number), and jaccard of 90%, and ex-vivo MRI showed SE of 100%, SP of 100%, F1 of 100%, ACC of 100%, PPV of 100%, NPV of 100%, and jaccard of 100%. These results needed to be validated in a larger sample size of 21- 44 patients.ConclusionThe presented method allows a more accurate evaluation of surgical margin status, and the first clinical experiences underline the high potential of integrating FSA with ex-vivo MRI of the fresh surgical specimen.

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