Detection rate and operating time required for gamma probe-guided sentinel lymph node resection after injection of technetium-99m nanocolloid into the prostate with and without preoperative imaging.

Journal: European Urology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To investigate the usefulness of presurgical image fusion of three-dimensional single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (CT/MRI) for detecting primary prostatic lymphatic landing sites (sentinel lymph nodes [SLNs]) using an intraoperative gamma probe in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy for organ-confined prostate cancer after intraprostatic (99m)Tc-nanocolloid injection.

Methods: In 15 patients the surgeon was unaware of the preoperative SPECT/CT/MRI fusion imaging results. In 21 patients the surgeon was supported by the preoperative SPECT/CT/MRI images. Selective SLN resection was followed by an extended backup pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND) and radical prostatectomy.

Results: In the group of 15 patients (gamma probe-guided SLN search only) presurgical SPECT/CT/MRI identified 137 SLNs (median of 10/patient; range: 2-19) and a total of 135 SLNs (median of 8/patient; range: 2-20) were detected intraoperatively (detection rate 98.5%). In the group of 21 patients with the surgeon knowing the preoperative SPECT/CT/MRI findings, 189 (median of 9/patient; range: 3-20) of the 190 imaged SLNs (median of 8/patient, range: 2-19) were found intraoperatively (detection rate 99.5%). Median operating time for sentinel lymphadenectomy using gamma probe only was 100 min (range: 40-130) versus 70 min (range: 20-140) for the SPECT/CT/MRI-supported resection (p=0.025). A median of 9 SLNs per patient (range: 2-19) was confirmed histologically.

Conclusions: Preoperative SPECT/CT/MRI is highly reliable to detect nonmetastatic sentinel nodes of the prostate. The operating time for SPECT/CT/MRI-supported SLN resection is significantly reduced compared to SLN resection guided by gamma probe alone. Both procedures take significantly longer than routine extended PLND.

Authors
Sebastian Warncke, Agostino Mattei, Frank Fuechsel, Sebastian Z'brun, Thomas Krause, Urs Studer
Relevant Conditions

Prostate Cancer