(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Cancer surgeries may soon get more colorful and
more precise.
Researchers from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center have developed a new
imaging system that highlights cancerous tissue, making it easier for surgeons
to see and remove it with less damage to normal tissue. The technique could
especially improve surgery for tumors whose boundaries are hard to track at
advanced stages such as breast, prostate, and lung cancer.
“This technique is really the first time that cancer surgeons can see structures
that are otherwise invisible, providing true image-guided surgery,” project
director, John Frangioni, M.D., Ph.D., Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, was
quoted as saying. “If we’re able to see cancer, we have a chance of curing it.”
The new technology is called FLARE – Fluorescence-Assisted Resection and
Exploration. It is made up of a near-infrared (NIR) imaging system, a video
monitor, and a computer.
FLARE uses NIR fluorophores – special chemical dyes designed to target specific
structures when they’re injected into patients. When they’re exposed to NIR
light, the dyes light up the cancer cells and can be seen on a video monitor.
Images of these “glowing” cancer cells are then superimposed over images of the
normal surgical field. Researchers say this allows surgeons to easily see the
cancer cells even in a background crowded by blood and other anatomical
structures.
Frangioni says the system is similar to the old color-by-number paint sets. It
gives surgeons a way of “cutting by color” instead of coloring by numbers.
So far, the system has been used successfully in pigs. The first human clinical
trials should begin this summer.
SOURCE: 236th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, August 17-21, 2008