Intraoperative fluorescence imaging in different surgical fields: Consensus among 140 intercontinental experts

Fernando Dip*, Emanuele Lo Menzo, Michael Bouvet, Rutger M Schols, Danny Sherwinter, Steven D Wexner, Kevin P White, Raul J Rosenthal

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite exponentially growing evidence supporting the use of intraoperative fluorescence imaging + indocyanine green dye, considerable variability exists in how and when it is used, and no published consensus guidelines exist. We have conducted Delphi surveys of international experts in the use of intraoperative fluorescence imaging covering 6 distinct surgical scenarios: laparoscopic cholecystectomy; colorectal, lymphedema, gastric cancer, and plastic surgery; and thyroid and parathyroid resections. Although each survey asked experts to vote on field-specific consensus statements, they also had 29 shared statements to permit some analysis spanning the 6 specialties. This article summarizes these results.

METHODS: Data on the 29 shared statements from 6 two-round Delphi consensus surveys were compiled to identify areas of overall consensus and compare the different specialties. As with the individual surveys, consensus was defined as ≥70% intervoter agreement.

RESULTS: Among 140 participating experts, overall consensus was achieved on 16 statements, including strong agreement that using indocyanine green is extremely safe, that it can be used even when informed written consent cannot be provided, that it significantly enhances anatomical visualization and impacts how procedures are performed, and that it significantly reduces overall procedural risk. However, indocyanine green dosing and timing are procedure-specific, with considerable variability persisting for some applications, and the overall consensus is that further research is necessary to optimize this facet of intraoperative fluorescence imaging.

CONCLUSION: Fluorescence imaging is gaining traction across multiple surgical specialties as an invaluable intraoperative tool. Its use in clinical practice and research seems destined to increase.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S54-S59
Number of pages6
JournalSurgery
Volume172
Issue number6S
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Indocyanine Green
  • Optical Imaging
  • Consensus
  • Ethnicity
  • Surgery, Plastic

Cite this