Esophageal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Perioperative Perfusion Measurement - a Feasibility and Usability Study
This study will investigate a new method to assess tissue perfusion during surgery for
esophageal cancer.
When a tumor in the distal esophagus is removed, the ends of the esophagus and the stomach
must be reconnected by an anastomosis. An optimal perfusion is essential to ensure a good
healing of the anastomosis. If anastomotic leakage occurs, it may prolong hospital stay,
increase the risk of serious complications and death, delay start-up of chemotherapy and
worsen the long-term survival prognosis.
During the operation the blood supply to the ends of the esophagus and stomach will be
assessed in different ways; The traditional where the surgeon looks and feels on the tissue,
and newer methods with an indocyanine green and cameras that illuminate the tissue with
near-infrared light. The surgeon will assess whether these methods change the decision on
where the ends should be sewn together.
Introduction:
An optimal perfusion is essential in gastrointestinal surgery when resection of a cancerous
tissue requires an anastomosis, since impaired perfusion seems to be associated with
increased risk of anastomotic leakage (AL). AL is a severe complication with the risk of;
prolonged hospital stay, cancer recurrence, permanent stoma in colorectal surgery, and
increased short and long-term mortality. To avoid poor perfusion of an anastomosis, perfusion
assessment is necessary during the operative procedure. Traditionally, perfusion is assessed
visually and manually by the surgeon by judging the; color of the tissue, bleeding from the
resection line, and the arterial supply pulse by palpation. These methods have earlier been
shown to be unreliable and prone to observer bias. Furthermore, palpation of arterial supply
is not possible in laparoscopic or robot-assisted surgery, and the increased use of staplers
to divide the bowel leaves no bleeding resection lines. Therefore newer methods for perfusion
assessment have been investigated, and fluorescence angiography (FA) and laser speckle
contrast imaging (LSCI) has shown very promising results. In a systematic review of
nonrandomized studies, the leakage rate in 916 colorectal resections was significantly lower
when using FA compared to controls (3.3%, [95% CI: 1.97-4.63%] vs 8.5%, [95% CI: 4.8-12.2%],
p=0.0055).
In FA, the tissue of interest is exposed to near-infrared (NIR) light simultaneously with
intravenous injection of a fluorescent dye. When the dye reaches the illuminated area, it
fluoresces, and a camera with a special filter can visualize the microcirculation of the
tissue on a monitor. Many NIR-camera systems are on the market, combining the technique with
conventional laparoscopic or robotic equipment, and several non-randomized studies have
indicated that FA may reduce the anastomotic leakage rate in gastrointestinal surgery. Most
surgeons are using only a visual subjective assessment of the FA, which may be prone to
observer bias. Moreover, if the camera is not held at a standard distance from the tissue, or
a different concentration of dye is used, a false negative or positive assessment of the
perfusion may be made. Therefore, it has been argued that there is a need for an objective
unbiased quantitative assessment tool in FA.
A quantification algorithm that provides a fluorescence-time curve and a quantitative
parameter of perfusion, the normalized slope has previously been published, where a nearly
linear correlation to regional flow was found. Until now measurements has been performed as
analyses of video-recordings after the procedure.
In order to use the method in a clinical setting, development and testing of a tool that may
be operated by the surgeon during the procedure to perform perioperative measurements is of
high importance. A touchscreen tablet has been developed, in order to perform live
perioperative quantitative perfusion assessment using FA. The tool may be used with several
systems including Karl Storz fluorescence laparoscopic equipment and the daVinci SI or XI
from Intuitive. This tool is essential in order to implement the technology into daily
practice, as it allows the surgeon to get an immediate quantitative parameter of perfusion
(normalized slope) at desired regions of interest. The interface of the tool should be easy
to use and provide fluorescence-time curves to control the automated calculation of the
normalized slope. In addition, a color-coded map of perfusion intensity should be provided as
an overlay on the white light picture of the bowel investigated.
Aim:
The touchscreen tablet has currently only been tested in animal surgery. The aim of the
present study is to investigate if the use of a perioperative quantitative perfusion
assessment tool may improve the perfusion assessment during surgery in humans.
Hypotheses:
- Perioperative perfusion assessment with FA will change the point of resection determined
by conventional visual perfusion assessment in GI junctional procedures.
- Quantitative perfusion assessment with FA (Q-ICG) will further change the point of
resection determined by visual assessment of the FA and conventional visual assessment
of perfusion in GI junctional procedures.
Primary endpoints:
- Feasibility of perfusion assessment with traditional visual, visual FA, and Q-ICG -
complied by completion rates.
- The feasibility and usability of the tool, the surgeons' experiences with the
Q-ICG-tablet interface - rated on a validated questionnaire, the System Usability Scale.
Secondary endpoints:
• Differences in the distance from the determined resection points using traditional
assessment, FA, and Q-ICG.
Methods
Study Design:
The study will be conducted as an observational feasibility and usability trial in patients
undergoing open or robot-assisted resection of the gastroesophageal junction (GI junction) in
a single university hospital center (Rigshospitalet, Department of Surgical
Gastroenterology). Patients will serve as their own control. Demographic information
(tumor-staging, gender, age, BMI, neoadjuvant treatment, ASA-classification, smoking,
alcohol, medication etc.) will be collected from the electronic patient records. In addition,
postoperative events, especially the presence of an anastomotic leakage, will be noted 30
days postoperatively. No formal sample size calculation has been performed as the study is a
feasibility study. 20 patients will be included. Participating patients will receive the same
standard post- and peri-operative care and follow-up as patients not included in the study.
Indocyanine green Indocyanine green (ICG) is a well-described nontoxic tricarbocyanine dye
used for decades in ophthalmology, cardiology, and hepatology. Very few mild adverse
reactions have been reported, but caution in patients with thyrotoxicosis, allergy towards
iodine or indocyanine green should be made. When injected intravenously it binds to blood
lipoproteins and is solely metabolized by the liver and excreted in the bile, with a short
half-life of approximately 4-5 minutes.
Surgical procedure and perfusion assessment When the dissection and division of the feeding
blood vessels are complete and the gastric conduit established and drawn to the thorax, the
gastrointestinal surgeon will choose the most proximal point possible on the conduit for the
anastomosis (Anastomotic point surgeon, APS) by pointing while a picture is captured, blinded
for the thoracic surgeon. A sterile paper ruler will be introduced to the thorax, in order to
measure the distance between the chosen resection points. Then, LSCI measurement of the
conduit is performed, and finally, a bolus of ICG (0.25 mg/kg body weight) will be injected
intravenously and flushed with 5 mL of saline, and the tissue of interest exposed to
NIR-light (excitation wavelength 750-800 nm) and emission observed at 800 nm (FA). During the
video-captures of LSCI and ICG-FA, the respiration will be paused for a maximum of 20 seconds
initiated at the moment of saline injection. After the FA the thoracic surgeon will by visual
assessment determine and mark a new anastomotic point by pointing at the most proximal point
possible on the conduit for the anastomosis, while a picture is taken (anastomotic point
fluorescence angiography, APFA). After the quantitative FA the surgeon will again mark an
anastomotic point (APQFA). The final anastomotic point will be chosen by the primary
gastrointestinal and the thoracic surgeon, and if the assessment of FA or quantitative FA
will influence this decision is solely up to the surgeon. The same points will be marked on
the LSCI picture but not revealed to the surgeon since the quantitative assessment of the
LSCI demands on post hoc data-analysis.
When the surgeon decides how much tissue to resect to ensure an optimal anastomotic
perfusion, care must be taken not to cause tension to the anastomosis by resecting too much
of the gastric conduit or the esophagus, as tension is a known risk factor of anastomotic
leakage. Again, the level of resection is solely decided by the surgeon and this decision
should, as always, be made by balancing factors of tension, perfusion, and excessive tissue
loss - all combined to ensure an optimal anastomotic healing.
Laparoscopic fluorescence angiography A laparoscope (ICG-Hopkins telescope 30°, 10 mm, Karl
Storz Gmbh and Co. KG, Tüttlingen, Germany) will be connected to a camera system (IMAGE1,
Karl Storz Gmbh and Co. KG, Tüttlingen, Germany) and a light-source (D-light P, Karl Storz
Gmbh and Co. KG, Tüttlingen, Germany) will supply the excitatory light and record the FA. The
laparoscope will be fixed in a mechanical holding arm 10 cm from the tissue of interest,
ensuring a stable position throughout the experiment.
Robot-assisted fluorescence angiography A surgical robot DaVinci SI (Intuitive Surgical Inc.,
Sunnyvale, CA, USA) and the Firefly Fluorescence Imaging system will be used. The camera will
be fixed 10 cm from the tissue of interest, ensuring a stable position throughout the
experiment.
Quantitative fluorescence angiography (Q-ICG) A video capture device (Av.io HD™, Epiphan
video, California, USA) will be connected to the surgical robot or the laparoscopic camera
system and transfer the video capture to a tablet (Microsoft Surface Pro4 I5, Microsoft,
Redmond, WA, USA). A program developed to quantify the FA will be installed. Here the
operator can choose regions of interest to quantify from the captured video sequence. A color
grading of perfusion will be provided as well as quantitative values from specific points.
From this assessment, the surgeon will again determine a new resection point (APQFA).
Comparison of resection points The distance from the tumor to the RPS will be measured before
the FA using the paper ruler. In addition, the distance from the APS to APFA and APQFA will
be measured using the ruler, either during the procedure or post hoc using the video-capture.
The comparison of the distance will be made on the distance of each point from the tumor.
Feasibility The feasibility will be investigated by comparison of completion rates of the
different perfusion assessment methods; traditional, FA, Q-ICG.
Usability The usability of the quantitative perfusion assessment tool will be investigated
with a validated questionnaire, the System Usability Scale, answered by the surgeon
immediately after the procedure.
Statistics Comparison of data will be performed using Mann Whitney U test or a paired sample
t-test depending on distribution normality. P-values < 0.05 is considered significant. No
formal sample size calculation has been made, as the study is considered a feasibility trial.
20 patients will be recruited. Statistic evaluation was performed using IBM SPSS Statistics ©
(v 22.0 SPSS Inc. Chicago, IL, USA).
Adverse events, risks, and disadvantages Adverse events associated with the use of ICG are
extremely rare and severe anaphylactic reactions are almost never occurring. However, safety
precautions have been made by excluding patients with allergy to iodine, ICG or shellfish. In
addition, no patients with liver insufficiency, thyrotoxicosis, ongoing pregnancy, or
lactating women will be included.
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