BACKGROUND: Real-time intraoperative discrimination of malignant tissue during pediatric solid tumor resection is limited, constraining margin optimization; the utility of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence in this population remains incompletely defined. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, observational, multi-institutional study (2019-2023) of pediatric, adolescent, and young adult patients undergoing resection of intra-abdominal solid malignancies following preoperative ICG administration. The primary endpoint was diagnostic accuracy of ICG fluorescence for tumor-containing specimens; secondary endpoints included association with margin status and surgeon-perceived intraoperative benefit. RESULTS: Forty-three operations in 42 patients yielded 55 specimens, of which 47 (85%) were malignant. Diagnostic performance was highest in hepatic tumors (sensitivity 83%, positive predictive value 83%) and lower in adrenal and heterogeneous tumor types. ICG avidity was not associated with improved negative margin rates (86% vs 75%, p=0.47). Surgeons reported intraoperative benefit in 67% of cases, most commonly improved visualization. No ICG-related adverse events occurred. CONCLUSIONS: ICG fluorescence provides reliable tumor identification in hepatic malignancies but does not correlate with margin-negative resection, indicating limited utility for margin guidance. These data support tumor-specific application and further investigation of optimized fluorescence strategies, including dosing, timing, and alternative fluorophores, in pediatric oncologic surgery.
Schermerhorn et al. (Wed,) studied this question.