The Denver Post

Testing probe to help cancer surgeons know they got it all

- By Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON» Patients emerging from cancer surgery want to know, “Did you get it all?” Now scientists are developing a penlike probe to help surgeons better tell when it’s safe to stop cutting or if stray tumor cells still lurk.

The device is highly experiment­al, but laboratory tests show it uses molecular fingerprin­ts to distinguis­h between cancerous cells and healthy ones far faster than today’s technology, Texas researcher­s reported Wednesday.

“That’s really anyone’s worst nightmare, to go through surgery and know there’s a chance” some cancer remains, said assistant chemistry professor Livia Eberlin of the University of Texas, who is leading the work. “By providing realtime molecular informatio­n, we could really improve accuracy.”

Her team aims to begin testing the device during surgeries, starting with breast cancer, early next year.

When surgeons think they’ve removed all of a tumor, they often also remove a thin layer of surroundin­g tissue, called the margin, to be sure no cancer cells linger at the edge and increase the risk of relapse.

The problem: That check takes time, for pathologis­ts to process the tissue and examine it under the microscope. For certain especially tricky tumors, surgeons sometimes pause for a halfhour to more than an hour, the patient still under anesthesia, to await the results. For breast cancer and certain other types, often the answer doesn’t arrive until a few days after surgery, raising the possibilit­y of repeat operations.

In contrast, “our device is able to give an immediate read-out in under a minute,” said UT research engineer Noah Giese.

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