What is Fluorescence-Guided Tumor Surgery?
Fluorescence-guided tumor surgery is an advanced intraoperative technique that is becoming increasingly prevalent, particularly in neuro-oncology (brain tumor surgery). Compared to conventional resection methods, this modality offers numerous clinical advantages. It enables the surgeon to visualize the tumor with high contrast, maximizing the extent of resection while meticulously preserving surrounding healthy parenchyma (tissue).
How Does It Work?
The procedure relies on the selective accumulation of a fluorophore within neoplastic cells:
- Administration of the Agent: Prior to surgery, the patient is administered a specialized fluorescent dye or prodrug (typically 5-Aminolevulinic Acid / 5-ALA or Indocyanine Green / ICG).
- Selective Accumulation: This metabolic agent is preferentially uptaken and converted into a fluorescent substance inside the malignant tumor cells.
- Intraoperative Visualization: During the resection, the surgical microscope is switched to a specialized light source and optical filter wavelength. Under this light, the tumor tissue emits a vivid fluorescence (glowing brightly), distinguishing itself clearly from the non-fluorescent, healthy brain tissue. This allows the surgeon to define the margins of the tumor with high precision.
Clinical Efficacy: Why is it Preferred?
- Precise Margin Delineation: The fluorescence clearly demarcates the tumor-to-brain interface, allowing the surgeon to differentiate infiltrative tumor margins from normal tissue.
- Maximized Extent of Resection (EOR): Achieving a more complete resection of the tumor mass has been clinically proven to prolong patient survival and significantly reduce the risk of local recurrence.
- Preservation of Eloquent Brain Tissue: Because the boundaries are illuminated, the risk of accidental mechanical damage to healthy, functional brain tissue is minimized.
- Optimized Operative Time: Enhanced visual clarity streamlines the resection process, which can reduce overall operating time and surgical trauma for the patient.
- Reduced Intraoperative Hemorrhage: Highly precise, targeted micro-dissection helps minimize accidental vascular injury and bleeding.
Clinical Indications: Which Tumors are Treated?
Fluorescence-guided surgery is highly effective across various oncology fields, most notably in neurosurgery as well as head and neck oncological surgeries. It has demonstrated exceptional clinical success in the resection of aggressive, high-grade malignant brain tumors, such as Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM), where tumor cells heavily infiltrate healthy surrounding tissue.