4.4 Article

Indocyanine green endoscopic evaluation of pituitary stalk and gland blood flow in craniopharyngiomas

Journal

NEUROSURGICAL REVIEW
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10143-023-02223-w

Keywords

Craniopharyngioma; Endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal surgery; Indocyanine green fluorescence; Pituitary function

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This study assessed the use of ICG fluorescence endoscopy for evaluating pituitary blood flow during craniopharyngioma resection and its impact on intraoperative decisions regarding pituitary stalk processing. The results showed that ICG signals correlated with postoperative pituitary function, with a negative signal indicating potential loss of function.
To assess the use of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence endoscopy to evaluate pituitary blood flow in craniopharyngioma resection and its possible impact on intraoperative decisions regarding pituitary stalk processing. Patients with craniopharyngiomas who had undergone transsphenoidal surgery since March 2021, when an ICG endoscope was introduced at the Kagoshima University Hospital, were included in the study. When targeted tumor removal was approaching completion, 10 mg of ICG was administered intravenously to evaluate blood flow in the pituitary stalk and gland. ICG signals and endocrinological status before and after surgery were evaluated retrospectively. Pituitary stalk and gland blood flow were evaluated as positive (++), weakly positive (+), and no signal (-).Ten patients with craniopharyngiomas underwent transsphenoidal surgery using an ICG endoscope (mean age 56.6 +/- 14.2 years; 40% male). Among the eight patients in whom the pituitary stalk was preserved, pituitary function with positive signal on the stalk was intact in two. Two other patients with weakly positive stalk and positive pituitary gland signals showed intact function or minimal pituitary dysfunction. Four patients had impairments in more than three axes with poor ICG signals in the stalk or pituitary gland. Two patients underwent pituitary amputation because of high tumor invasion and lack of ICG signal in the stalk after tumor removal, resulting in panhypopituitarism. A negative ICG signal in the pituitary stalk is likely to indicate postoperative pituitary function loss. Craniopharyngioma surgery using ICG endoscopy may be useful for predicting endocrine prognosis and improving tumor outcomes.

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