Cancers (Jun 2024)

Does 5-ALA Fluorescence Microscopy Improve Complete Resectability in Cerebral/Cerebellar Metastatic Surgery? A Retrospective Data Analysis from a Cranial Center

  • Hraq Mourad Sarkis,
  • Samer Zawy Alsofy,
  • Ralf Stroop,
  • Marc Lewitz,
  • Stephanie Schipmann,
  • Markus Unnewehr,
  • Werner Paulus,
  • Makoto Nakamura,
  • Christian Ewelt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16122242
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 12
p. 2242

Abstract

Read online

(1) Background: In this study, the intraoperative fluorescence behavior of brain metastases after the administration of 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) was analyzed. The aim was to investigate whether the resection of brain metastases using 5-ALA fluorescence also leads to a more complete resections and thus to a prolongation of survival; (2) Methods: The following variables have been considered: age, sex, number of metastases, localization, involvement of eloquent area, correlation between fluorescence and primary tumor/subtype, resection, and survival time. The influence on the degree of resection was determined with a control MRI within the first three postoperative days; (3) Results: Brain metastases fluoresced in 57.5% of cases. The highest fluorescence rates of 73.3% were found in breast carcinoma metastases and the histologic subtype adenocarcinoma (68.1%). No correlation between fluorescence behavior and localization, primary tumor, or histological subtype was found. Complete resection was detected in 82.5%, of which 56.1% were fluorescence positive. There was a trend towards improved resectability (increase of 12.1%) and a significantly longer survival time (p = 0.009) in the fluorescence-positive group; (4) Conclusions: 5-ALA-assisted extirpation leads to a more complete resection and longer survival and can therefore represent a low-risk addition to modern surgery for brain metastases.

Keywords