Health Technologies

Glowing dye helps surgeons eradicate prostate cancer – study

A glowing marker dye that sticks to prostate cancer cells could help surgeons to remove them in real-time, new research has revealed.  

Cancer Research UK-funded scientists used a fluorescent dye attached to a special marker molecule to give medics a “second pair of eyes” during surgery for prostate cancer.

Twenty-three men with prostate cancer were injected with the marker dye before undergoing prostate removal surgery.

The marker dye found areas of cancerous tissue not picked up by the naked eye or other clinical methods.

The dye allowed the surgeons to remove all cancerous tissues – which could reduce the chances of cancer coming back – while preserving healthy tissues.

Preserving healthy tissues means fewer life-changing side effects after surgery.

Professor Freddie Hamdy is Nuffield Professor of Surgery at the University of Oxford and lead author of the study.

He said: “We are giving the surgeon a second pair of eyes to see where the cancer cells are and if they have spread.

“It’s the first time we’ve managed to see such fine details of prostate cancer in real-time during surgery.

“With this technique, we can strip all the cancer away, including the cells that have spread from the tumour which could give it the chance to come back later.

“It also allows us to preserve as much of the healthy structures around the prostate as we can, to reduce unnecessary life-changing side-effects like incontinence and erectile dysfunction.

The combination of dye and targeting molecule, called IR800-IAB2M, allows surgeons to see the edges of the tumour and identify any clusters of cells that have spread from the tumour into nearby pelvic tissues and lymph nodes.

This guides the surgeon to remove all cancerous tissues and preserve healthy areas around the prostate.

This substantially reduces the chances that the cancer will come back in future and minimises the possibility of life changing side-effects for the patient after the operation.

In the first stage of the ProMOTE study, 23 men diagnosed with prostate cancer were injected with the fluorescent dye before undergoing robot-assisted surgery to remove the prostate.

Surgeons used an imaging system that shines a special type of light on the prostate and nearby areas, to make the prostate cancer cells glow. .

For multiple patients in the study, the dye identified clusters of cells which had spread away from the tumour which couldn’t be seen by the naked eye.

This marker dye is in its early stages of clinical development, but in future it could be used routinely by surgeons to see every part of the cancer while they perform surgery to remove the prostate.

The imaging system to see glowing cancer cells could be integrated into the robot-assisted tools used for prostate surgery.

The marker dye could also be used for other types of cancer, by changing the protein it uses to attach itself to the cancer cells.

Further clinical trials are already underway in larger groups of patients to find out if the technique removes more prostate cancer, and preserves more healthy pelvic tissue, compared to existing surgical methods.

Dr Iain Foulkes is Executive Director of Research and Innovation at Cancer Research UK.

He said: “We hope that this new technique continues to show promise in future trials.

“It is exciting that we could soon have access to surgical tools which could reliably eradicate prostate and other cancers and give people longer, healthier lives free from the disease.”

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK, with around 52,300 new cases every year.

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