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Intraoperative Evaluation Using ICG and SPY Fluorescence to Prevent Wound Complications in Head and Neck Surgery.

University Health Network, Toronto logo

University Health Network, Toronto

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Head and Neck Cancer

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: ICG and SPY system for wound complications

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03345732
16-5976

Details and patient eligibility

About

Wound complications, such as salivary-cutaneous fistulas and skin necrosis, result in significant patient morbidity and death. Head and neck wounds are complicated because of multiple tissue layers, critical structures and variable vascularity. When vascularity is compromised, wounds do not heal and can lead to life threatening haemorrhage or morbid infections. The field of microsurgical reconstruction has developed and expanded over the last 20 years to specifically ameliorate these issues. The challenge is that the vascularity of the microsurgical transplant or the recipient tissue bed can have areas of decreased vascularity that cannot be appreciated by the surgeon's intraoperative exam alone. Surgeons would be able to make better decisions with respect to the vascularity if there was an imaging technique that could indicate the vascular supply of the tissues undergoing surgical reconstruction.

Laser-assisted indocyanine green fluorescent dye angiography (LA-ICG) using the SPY System (Novadaq Technologies Inc., Richmond, British Columbia, Canada) is an intraoperative vascular imaging technique that improves the ability of a surgeon to assess the vascular supply in the surgical bed. This tool, which is approved by Health Canada for reconstructive surgery, has been used extensively in breast reconstruction and gastrointestinal procedures with encouraging results. The ability to address ischemic tissues intraoperatively could potentially decrease the rate of devastating wound complications in head and neck surgery patients. The objective of this observational study is to assess the effectiveness of LA-ICG in head and neck reconstructive procedures to reduce the rate of skin necrosis and fistula.

Full description

This is a prospective, observational study in patients undergoing head and neck surgery with reconstruction. Patients will be identified preoperatively by the participating surgeons. Eligible patients will be >18 years of age with head and neck oncologic or traumatic reconstructive needs requiring surgical reconstruction of the soft tissues or bony structures of the head and neck who consent to use of ICG and the SPY System intraoperatively. Defect types to be included in the study are any hypopharyngeal defect (i.e. Total laryngectomy, total laryngectomy with partial pharyngectomy), tracheal defects, oral cavity defects at risk for devascularized mucosa, or large skin defects requiring rotation-advancement flaps for closure. Donor types to be included are pedicled locoregional muscle flaps including pectoralis muscle flaps, cervicofacial skin advancement flaps, infrascapular and suprascapular flaps, and any free flap used to reconstruct the defects mentioned previously.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Adult patients (>18 years old) who are undergoing reconstruction for traumatic or oncologic head and neck wounds
  2. Specific defects eligible are any pharyngeal, tracheal, or oral cavity defects at risk of devascularized mucosa, or large skin defects requiring skin advancement flaps. This includes laryngectomy/laryngectomy-partial pharyngectomy with primary closure.
  3. Patient with the above defects that will be having reconstruction with the following donor tissues: local, regional or autogenous free flaps.
  4. Informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  1. Patients who are pregnant or nursing
  2. Patients with an allergy to iodine (contrast ICG dye contains sodium iodide)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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