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Rationale: In most oral cancer patients, surgical treatment includes resection of the primary tumor combined with the excision of lymph nodes (LN)s, either for staging or treatment. All LNs harvested during surgery require tissue processing and subsequent microscopic histopathological assessment to determine the nodal stage. In this study, we investigated the use of the fluorescent tracer cetuximab-800CW to discriminate between tumor-positive and tumor-negative LNs before histopathological examination.Methods: Here, we report a retrospective ad hoc analysis of a clinical trial designed for resection margin evaluation of oral squamous cell carcinoma patients (NCT02415881). Two days prior to surgery, patients were intravenously administered with 75 mg cetuximab followed by 15 mg cetuximab-800CW, an Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR)-targeting fluorescent tracer. Fluorescence images were obtained of excised, formalin-fixed LNs and correlated with histopathological assessment.Results: Fluorescence molecular imaging of 514 LNs (61 pathologically positive nodes) can detect tumorpositive LNs ex vivo with 100% sensitivity and 86.8% specificity (AUC 0.97). In this cohort, the number of LNs that require microscopic assessment was decreased by 77.4%, without missing any metastasis.Additionally, in 7.5% of the fluorescence false-positive LNs, we identified metastases missed by standard histopathological analysis.
Conclusion:Our findings suggest that EGFR-targeted fluorescence molecular imaging can aid in the detection of LN metastases in the ex vivo setting in oral cancer patients. This image-guided concept can improve the efficacy of postoperative LN examination and identify additional metastases, which safeguards appropriate postoperative therapy and may improve patient prognosis.
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