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Published in: BMC Medicine 1/2021

01-12-2021 | Gastrectomy | Research article

Comparison of submucosal and subserosal approaches toward optimized indocyanine green tracer-guided laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for patients with gastric cancer (FUGES-019): a randomized controlled trial

Authors: Qi-Yue Chen, Qing Zhong, Ping Li, Jian-Wei Xie, Zhi-Yu Liu, Xiao-Bo Huang, Guang-Tan Lin, Jia-Bin Wang, Jian-Xian Lin, Jun Lu, Long-Long Cao, Mi Lin, Qiao-Ling Zheng, Ru-Hong Tu, Ze-Ning Huang, Chao-Hui Zheng, Chang-Ming Huang

Published in: BMC Medicine | Issue 1/2021

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Abstract

Background

Application of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging is effective in guiding laparoscopic radical lymphadenectomy for gastric cancer. However, the optimal approach for indocyanine green injection is controversial. Therefore, the objective of this study was aimed to compare the efficacy and ICG injection between the preoperative submucosal and intraoperative subserosal approaches for lymph node (LN) tracing during laparoscopic gastrectomy.

Method

This randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04219332) included 266 patients with potentially resectable gastric cancer (cT1–T4a, N0/+, M0) enrolled from a tertiary teaching center between December 2019 and October 2020. The primary endpoint was total number of retrieved LNs.

Results

In total, 259 patients (n = 130 and n = 129 in the submucosal and subserosal groups, respectively) were included in the per-protocol analysis. There are no significant differences in total number of retrieved LNs between the two groups (49.8 vs. 49.2, P = 0.713). The rate of LN noncompliance in the submucosal group was comparable to that in the subserosal group (32.3% vs. 33.3%, P = 0.860). No significant difference was found between the submucosal and subserosal groups in terms of the incidence (17.7% vs. 16.3%; P = 0.762) or severity of postoperative complications. The mean fluorescence cost in the submucosal group was higher than that in the subserosal group ($335.3 vs. $182.4; P < 0.001). The overall treatment satisfaction score was lower in the submucosal group than in the subserosal group (70.5 vs. 76.1%, P = 0.048).

Conclusion

ICG administered by subserosal injection was comparable to that administered by submucosal injection for lymph node tracing in gastric cancer. However, the former approach imposed a lower economic and mental burden on patients undergoing laparoscopic D2 lymphadenectomy.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04219332.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Comparison of submucosal and subserosal approaches toward optimized indocyanine green tracer-guided laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for patients with gastric cancer (FUGES-019): a randomized controlled trial
Authors
Qi-Yue Chen
Qing Zhong
Ping Li
Jian-Wei Xie
Zhi-Yu Liu
Xiao-Bo Huang
Guang-Tan Lin
Jia-Bin Wang
Jian-Xian Lin
Jun Lu
Long-Long Cao
Mi Lin
Qiao-Ling Zheng
Ru-Hong Tu
Ze-Ning Huang
Chao-Hui Zheng
Chang-Ming Huang
Publication date
01-12-2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Medicine / Issue 1/2021
Electronic ISSN: 1741-7015
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-021-02125-y

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