Intraoperative Assessment of Gastric Sleeve Oxygenation Using Hyperspectral Imaging in Esophageal Resection: A Feasibility Study

2020 
Introduction Sufficient tissue oxygenation is essential for anastomotic healing in visceral surgery. Hyperspectral imaging (HSI) is a noncontact, noninvasive technique for clinical assessment of tissue oxygenation in real time. Methods In this case series, HSI was used in 4 patients who were admitted for either esophageal cancer or cardiac carcinoma (AEG type I or II). Thoraco-abdominal surgical esophageal resection was performed after staging and neoadjuvant therapy. Intraoperative oxygenation of superficial (StO2) and underlying tissue (NIR perfusion index) of the gastric sleeve were studied intrathoracic by means of the TIVITA® Tissue HSI camera. This was performed prior to esophagogastric anastomosis. The postoperative course, especially in view of surgical complications, was recorded. Results Assessment of StO2 and NIR perfusion index was performed in 4 regions of interest per gastric sleeve, aboral and oral of the clinically determined resection line. It allowed the fast quantification of gastric oxygenation prior gastroesophageal anastomosis. Median StO2 aboral of the determined resection line was 69%, while median StO2 in the oral part of the gastric sleeve was found at 53%. In contrast, the median NIR perfusion index was similar aboral (80) and oral (82) of the resection line. In none of the 4 studied patients, an anastomotic failure appeared. Discussion/Conclusion This report suggests that HSI is a feasible technique for intraoperative assessment of tissue oxygenation before gastroesophageal anastomosis and might reduce the incidence of anastomotic failure in the gastrointestinal tract.
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