It is commonly reported that maximizing surgical resection of contrast-enhancing regions in patients with glioblastoma improves overall survival. Efforts to achieve an improved rate of resection have included several tools: among those, the recent widespread of fluorophores. Sodium fluorescein is an unspecific, vascular dye which tends to accumulate in areas with an altered blood-brain barrier. In this retrospective analysis of patients prospectively enrolled in the FLUOCERTUM study, we aimed to assess the role of fluorescein-guided surgery on surgical radicality, survival, and morbidity. A retrospective review based on 93 consecutively and prospectively enrolled IDH wild-type glioblastoma patients (2016-2022) was performed; fluorescence characteristics, rate of resection, clinical outcome, and survival were analyzed. No side effect related to fluorescein occurred; all of the tumors presented a strong yellow-green enhancement and fluorescein was judged fundamental in distinguishing tumors from viable tissue in all cases. Gross total resection was achieved in 77 cases out of 93 patients (82.8%). After a mean follow-up time of 17.4 months (3-78 months), the median progression-free survival was 12 months, with a PFS-6 and PFS-12 of 94.2% and 50%, respectively, whereas median overall survival was estimated to be 16 months; survival at 6, 12, and 24 months was 91.8%, 72.3%, and 30.1%, respectively. Based on these results, we can assert that the fluorescein-guided technique is a safe and valuable method for patients harboring a newly diagnosed, untreated glioblastoma.
Keywords: YELLOW 560 filter; fluorescence-guided neurosurgery; glioblastoma; gross total resection; neuro-oncology; overall survival; sodium fluorescein.