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ePoster Display

1420P - Clinical implications of Indocyanine green fluorescence imaging-guided laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for patients with gastric cancer: Pooled analysis from two randomized controlled trials

Date

16 Sep 2021

Session

ePoster Display

Topics

Clinical Research

Tumour Site

Gastric Cancer

Presenters

Qing Zhong

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2021) 32 (suppl_5): S1040-S1075. 10.1016/annonc/annonc708

Authors

Q. Zhong, Q. Chen, X. Huang, P. Li, C. Zheng, C. Huang

Author affiliations

  • Department Of Gastric Surgery, Fujian Medical University Union Hospital, 350000 - Fuzhou/CN

Resources

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Abstract 1420P

Background

The value of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging in tracing metastatic LNs has rarely been reported. This study evaluated the efficacy and clinical implications of fluorescence imaging-guided lymphadenectomy and the sensitivity of fluorescent lymphography to detect metastatic lymph node (LN) stations in gastric cancer (GC).

Methods

This analysis pooled data from two randomized controlled trials on laparoscopic ICG tracer-guided lymphadenectomy for GC between November 2018 and October 2020. The ICG group received ICG injection using either the intraoperative subserosal or submucosal approaches 1 d before surgery and underwent fluorescence imaging-guided lymphadenectomy. The non-ICG group underwent conventional lymphadenectomy without intraoperative imaging.

Results

Among 514 enrolled patients, the ICG and non-ICG groups included 385 and 129, respectively. A significantly higher mean number of LNs was retrieved in the ICG group than in the non-ICG group (49.9 vs. 42.0, P<0.001). The ICG group showed a lower LN noncompliance rate than that in the non-ICG group (31.9% vs. 57.4%, P<0.001). The sensitivity of fluorescence imaging for detecting all metastatic LN stations was 86.8%. The negative predictive value was 92.2% for nonfluorescent stations. For detecting all metastatic stations, subgroup analysis revealed 97.7%, 91.7%, 86.2%, and 84.3% sensitivities for pT1, pT2, pT3, and pT4a tumors, respectively. Regardless of gastrectomy type, the diagnostic accuracy for detecting all metastatic stations in the D1+ and D2 stations for cT1–cT2 disease reached 100%. In addition, we created a fluorescent imaging-guided lymphadenectomy recommended flow chart for GC.

Conclusions

ICG fluorescence imaging assisted in the thorough dissection of potentially metastatic LNs, as recommended for individualized laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for patients with GC.

Clinical trial identification

NCT03050879, NCT04219332.

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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