Repurposing Molecular Imaging and Sensing for Cancer Image-Guided Surgery

Gone are the days when medical imaging was used primarily to visualize anatomic structures. The emergence of molecular imaging (MI), championed by radiolabeled F-FDG PET, has expanded the information content derived from imaging to include pathophysiologic and molecular processes. Cancer imaging, in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 61; no. 8; pp. 1113 - 1122
Main Authors Mondal, Suman B, O'Brien, Christine M, Bishop, Kevin, Fields, Ryan C, Margenthaler, Julie A, Achilefu, Samuel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Society of Nuclear Medicine 01.08.2020
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Summary:Gone are the days when medical imaging was used primarily to visualize anatomic structures. The emergence of molecular imaging (MI), championed by radiolabeled F-FDG PET, has expanded the information content derived from imaging to include pathophysiologic and molecular processes. Cancer imaging, in particular, has leveraged advances in MI agents and technology to improve the accuracy of tumor detection, interrogate tumor heterogeneity, monitor treatment response, focus surgical resection, and enable image-guided biopsy. Surgeons are actively latching on to the incredible opportunities provided by medical imaging for preoperative planning, intraoperative guidance, and postoperative monitoring. From label-free techniques to enabling cancer-selective imaging agents, image-guided surgery provides surgical oncologists and interventional radiologists both macroscopic and microscopic views of cancer in the operating room. This review highlights the current state of MI and sensing approaches available for surgical guidance. Salient features of nuclear, optical, and multimodal approaches will be discussed, including their strengths, limitations, and clinical applications. To address the increasing complexity and diversity of methods available today, this review provides a framework to identify a contrast mechanism, suitable modality, and device. Emerging low-cost, portable, and user-friendly imaging systems make the case for adopting some of these technologies as the global standard of care in surgical practice.
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Contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:0161-5505
1535-5667
2159-662X
DOI:10.2967/jnumed.118.220426