Author:
Ottolino-Perry Kathryn,Shahid Anam,DeLuca Stephanie,Son Viktor,Sukhram Mayleen,Meng Fannong,Liu Zhihui,Rapic Sara,Anantha Nayana Thalanki,Wang Shirley C.,Chamma Emilie,Gibson Christopher,Medeiros Philip J.,Majeed Safa,Chu Ashley,Wignall Olivia,Pizzolato Alessandra,Rosen Cheryl F.,Teene Liis Lindvere,Starr-Dunham Danielle,Kulbatski Iris,Panzarella Tony,Done Susan J.,Easson Alexandra M.,Leong Wey L.,DaCosta Ralph S.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Re-excision due to positive margins following breast-conserving surgery (BCS) negatively affects patient outcomes and healthcare costs. The inability to visualize margin involvement is a significant challenge in BCS. 5-Aminolevulinic acid hydrochloride (5-ALA HCl), a non-fluorescent oral prodrug, causes intracellular accumulation of fluorescent porphyrins in cancer cells. This single-center Phase II randomized controlled trial evaluated the safety, feasibility, and diagnostic accuracy of a prototype handheld fluorescence imaging device plus 5-ALA for intraoperative visualization of invasive breast carcinomas during BCS.
Methods
Fifty-four patients were enrolled and randomized to receive no 5-ALA or oral 5-ALA HCl (15 or 30 mg/kg). Forty-five patients (n = 15/group) were included in the analysis. Fluorescence imaging of the excised surgical specimen was performed, and biopsies were collected from within and outside the clinically demarcated tumor border of the gross specimen for blinded histopathology.
Results
In the absence of 5-ALA, tissue autofluorescence imaging lacked tumor-specific fluorescent contrast. Both 5-ALA doses caused bright red tumor fluorescence, with improved visualization of tumor contrasted against normal tissue autofluorescence. In the 15 mg/kg 5-ALA group, the positive predictive value (PPV) for detecting breast cancer inside and outside the grossly demarcated tumor border was 100.0% and 55.6%, respectively. In the 30 mg/kg 5-ALA group, the PPV was 100.0% and 50.0% inside and outside the demarcated tumor border, respectively. No adverse events were observed, and clinical feasibility of this imaging device-5-ALA combination approach was confirmed.
Conclusions
This is the first known clinical report of visualization of 5-ALA-induced fluorescence in invasive breast carcinoma using a real-time handheld intraoperative fluorescence imaging device.
Trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT01837225. Registered 23 April 2013.
Funder
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation
Cancer Care Ontario
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
18 articles.
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