4.3 Article

A DROP-IN beta probe for robot-assisted 68Ga-PSMA radioguided surgery: first ex vivo technology evaluation using prostate cancer specimens

Journal

EJNMMI RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s13550-020-00682-6

Keywords

Radioguided surgery; Beta particle detection; Robot-assisted surgery; Prostate cancer; PET; PSMA

Funding

  1. Sapienza University of Rome [RM11715C7D2B14C5]

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Background Recently, a flexible DROP-IN gamma-probe was introduced for robot-assisted radioguided surgery, using traditional low-energy SPECT-isotopes. In parallel, a novel approach to achieve sensitive radioguidance using beta-emitting PET isotopes has been proposed. Integration of these two concepts would allow to exploit the use of PET tracers during robot-assisted tumor-receptor-targeted. In this study, we have engineered and validated the performance of a novel DROP-IN beta particle (DROP-IN beta) detector. Methods Seven prostate cancer patients with PSMA-PET positive tumors received an additional intraoperative injection of similar to 70 MBq(68)Ga-PSMA-11, followed by robot-assisted prostatectomy and extended pelvic lymph node dissection. The surgical specimens from these procedures were used to validate the performance of our DROP-IN(beta)probe prototype, which merged a scintillating detector with a housing optimized for a 12-mm trocar and prograsp instruments. Results After optimization of the detector and probe housing via Monte Carlo simulations, the resulting DROP-IN(beta)probe prototype was tested in a robotic setting. In the ex vivo setting, the probe-positioned by the robot-was able to identify(68)Ga-PSMA-11 containing hot-spots in the surgical specimens: signal-to-background (S/B) was > 5 when pathology confirmed that the tumor was located < 1 mm below the specimen surface.Ga-68-PSMA-11 containing (and PET positive) lymph nodes, as found in two patients, were also confirmed with the DROP-IN(beta)probe (S/B > 3). The rotational freedom of the DROP-IN design and the ability to manipulate the probe with the prograsp tool allowed the surgeon to perform autonomous beta-tracing. Conclusions This study demonstrates the feasibility of beta-radioguided surgery in a robotic context by means of a DROP-IN(beta)detector. When translated to an in vivo setting in the future, this technique could provide a valuable tool in detecting tumor remnants on the prostate surface and in confirmation of PSMA-PET positive lymph nodes.

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