Background: Clinical studies have demonstrated that intraoperative molecular imaging (IMI) with pafolacianine identifies occult pulmonary lesions that are not identified by preoperative computed tomography or by intraoperative inspection techniques in ∼20% of patients. This study describes occult lesion clinical data and evaluates characteristics so that surgeons can better incorporate this emerging technology into clinical decision making.
Methods: Participants (n = 100) enrolled in a phase 3 trial of IMI with pafolacianine during pulmonary resection (Enabling Lung Cancer Identification Using Folate Receptor Targeting [ELUCIDATE]; NCT04241315) were identified. Participants underwent preoperative computed tomography with 1.25-mm slices. Patient and lesion characteristics were analyzed. Positive predictive value and false positive rates were tabulated for IMI fluorescent lesions, with predictors of malignant vs benign occult lesions described.
Results: IMI identified 29 occult lesions in 23 (23%) participants. Seventeen of 29 (58%) lesions were identified within the same lobe as known lesions; 12 of 29 (42%) were identified in a different lobe from the suspicious nodule known by preoperative assessment. Twenty-three of 29 (79%) of occult lesions found by IMI were resected with an additional wedge resection. Ten of 29 (34%) lesions identified by IMI were malignant. There was no additional morbidity in participants with lesions resected. With pafolacianine, 7 participants had a synchronous primary stage I lung cancer identified, and 1 participant had additional metastases identified.
Conclusions: IMI with pafolacianine identifies occult malignant lesions during pulmonary resection despite thorough preoperative imaging and intraoperative assessment by experienced surgeons.
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.