Cargando…

Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature

INTRODUCTION: Achieving adequate resection margins during oral cancer surgery is important to improve patient prognosis. Surgeons have the delicate task of achieving an adequate resection and safeguarding satisfactory remaining function and acceptable physical appearance, while relying on visual ins...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barroso, Elisa M., Aaboubout, Yassine, van der Sar, Lisette C., Mast, Hetty, Sewnaik, Aniel, Hardillo, Jose A., ten Hove, Ivo, Nunes Soares, Maria R., Ottevanger, Lars, Bakker Schut, Tom C., Puppels, Gerwin J., Koljenović, Senada
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8044914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33869013
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.628297
_version_ 1783678593067384832
author Barroso, Elisa M.
Aaboubout, Yassine
van der Sar, Lisette C.
Mast, Hetty
Sewnaik, Aniel
Hardillo, Jose A.
ten Hove, Ivo
Nunes Soares, Maria R.
Ottevanger, Lars
Bakker Schut, Tom C.
Puppels, Gerwin J.
Koljenović, Senada
author_facet Barroso, Elisa M.
Aaboubout, Yassine
van der Sar, Lisette C.
Mast, Hetty
Sewnaik, Aniel
Hardillo, Jose A.
ten Hove, Ivo
Nunes Soares, Maria R.
Ottevanger, Lars
Bakker Schut, Tom C.
Puppels, Gerwin J.
Koljenović, Senada
author_sort Barroso, Elisa M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Achieving adequate resection margins during oral cancer surgery is important to improve patient prognosis. Surgeons have the delicate task of achieving an adequate resection and safeguarding satisfactory remaining function and acceptable physical appearance, while relying on visual inspection, palpation, and preoperative imaging. Intraoperative assessment of resection margins (IOARM) is a multidisciplinary effort, which can guide towards adequate resections. Different forms of IOARM are currently used, but it is unknown how accurate these methods are in predicting margin status. Therefore, this review aims to investigate: 1) the IOARM methods currently used during oral cancer surgery, 2) their performance, and 3) their clinical relevance. METHODS: A literature search was performed in the following databases: Embase, Medline, Web of Science Core Collection, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Google Scholar (from inception to January 23, 2020). IOARM performance was assessed in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity in predicting margin status, and the reduction of inadequate margins. Clinical relevance (i.e., overall survival, local recurrence, regional recurrence, local recurrence-free survival, disease-specific survival, adjuvant therapy) was recorded if available. RESULTS: Eighteen studies were included in the review, of which 10 for soft tissue and 8 for bone. For soft tissue, defect-driven IOARM-studies showed the average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 90.9%, 47.6%, and 84.4%, and specimen-driven IOARM-studies showed, 91.5%, 68.4%, and 96.7%, respectively. For bone, specimen-driven IOARM-studies performed better than defect-driven, with an average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 96.6%, 81.8%, and 98%, respectively. For both, soft tissue and bone, IOARM positively impacts patient outcome. CONCLUSION: IOARM improves margin-status, especially the specimen-driven IOARM has higher performance compared to defect-driven IOARM. However, this conclusion is limited by the low number of studies reporting performance results for defect-driven IOARM. The current methods suffer from inherent disadvantages, namely their subjective character and the fact that only a small part of the resection surface can be assessed in a short time span, causing sampling errors. Therefore, a solution should be sought in the field of objective techniques that can rapidly assess the whole resection surface.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8044914
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80449142021-04-15 Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature Barroso, Elisa M. Aaboubout, Yassine van der Sar, Lisette C. Mast, Hetty Sewnaik, Aniel Hardillo, Jose A. ten Hove, Ivo Nunes Soares, Maria R. Ottevanger, Lars Bakker Schut, Tom C. Puppels, Gerwin J. Koljenović, Senada Front Oncol Oncology INTRODUCTION: Achieving adequate resection margins during oral cancer surgery is important to improve patient prognosis. Surgeons have the delicate task of achieving an adequate resection and safeguarding satisfactory remaining function and acceptable physical appearance, while relying on visual inspection, palpation, and preoperative imaging. Intraoperative assessment of resection margins (IOARM) is a multidisciplinary effort, which can guide towards adequate resections. Different forms of IOARM are currently used, but it is unknown how accurate these methods are in predicting margin status. Therefore, this review aims to investigate: 1) the IOARM methods currently used during oral cancer surgery, 2) their performance, and 3) their clinical relevance. METHODS: A literature search was performed in the following databases: Embase, Medline, Web of Science Core Collection, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Google Scholar (from inception to January 23, 2020). IOARM performance was assessed in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity in predicting margin status, and the reduction of inadequate margins. Clinical relevance (i.e., overall survival, local recurrence, regional recurrence, local recurrence-free survival, disease-specific survival, adjuvant therapy) was recorded if available. RESULTS: Eighteen studies were included in the review, of which 10 for soft tissue and 8 for bone. For soft tissue, defect-driven IOARM-studies showed the average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 90.9%, 47.6%, and 84.4%, and specimen-driven IOARM-studies showed, 91.5%, 68.4%, and 96.7%, respectively. For bone, specimen-driven IOARM-studies performed better than defect-driven, with an average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 96.6%, 81.8%, and 98%, respectively. For both, soft tissue and bone, IOARM positively impacts patient outcome. CONCLUSION: IOARM improves margin-status, especially the specimen-driven IOARM has higher performance compared to defect-driven IOARM. However, this conclusion is limited by the low number of studies reporting performance results for defect-driven IOARM. The current methods suffer from inherent disadvantages, namely their subjective character and the fact that only a small part of the resection surface can be assessed in a short time span, causing sampling errors. Therefore, a solution should be sought in the field of objective techniques that can rapidly assess the whole resection surface. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8044914/ /pubmed/33869013 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.628297 Text en Copyright © 2021 Barroso, Aaboubout, van der Sar, Mast, Sewnaik, Hardillo, ten Hove, Nunes Soares, Ottevanger, Bakker Schut, Puppels and Koljenović https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Barroso, Elisa M.
Aaboubout, Yassine
van der Sar, Lisette C.
Mast, Hetty
Sewnaik, Aniel
Hardillo, Jose A.
ten Hove, Ivo
Nunes Soares, Maria R.
Ottevanger, Lars
Bakker Schut, Tom C.
Puppels, Gerwin J.
Koljenović, Senada
Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title_full Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title_fullStr Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title_full_unstemmed Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title_short Performance of Intraoperative Assessment of Resection Margins in Oral Cancer Surgery: A Review of Literature
title_sort performance of intraoperative assessment of resection margins in oral cancer surgery: a review of literature
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8044914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33869013
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.628297
work_keys_str_mv AT barrosoelisam performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT aabouboutyassine performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT vandersarlisettec performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT masthetty performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT sewnaikaniel performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT hardillojosea performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT tenhoveivo performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT nunessoaresmariar performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT ottevangerlars performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT bakkerschuttomc performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT puppelsgerwinj performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature
AT koljenovicsenada performanceofintraoperativeassessmentofresectionmarginsinoralcancersurgeryareviewofliterature