The realization of medical devices for precision surgery - development and implementation of ' stop-and-go' imaging technologies

Expert Rev Med Devices. 2024 May 9:1-10. doi: 10.1080/17434440.2024.2341102. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Introduction: Surgery and biomedical imaging encompass a big share of the medical-device market. The ever-mounting demand for precision surgery has driven the integration of these two into the field of image-guided surgery. A key-question herein is how imaging modalities can guide the surgical decision-making process. Through performance-based design, chemists, engineers, and doctors need to build a bridge between imaging technologies and surgical challenges.

Areas-covered: This perspective article highlights the complementary nature between the technological design of an image-guidance modality and the type of procedure performed. The specific roles of the involved professionals, imaging technologies, and surgical indications are addressed.

Expert-opinion: Molecular-image-guided surgery has the potential to advance pre-, intra- and post-operative tissue characterization. To achieve this, surgeons need the access to well-designed indication-specific chemical-agents and detection modalities. Hereby, some technologies stimulate exploration ('go'), while others stimulate caution ('stop'). However, failing to adequately address the indication-specific needs rises the risk of incorrect tool employment and sub-optimal surgical performance. Therefore, besides the availability of new technologies, market growth is highly dependent on the practical nature and impact on real-life clinical care. While urology currently takes the lead in the widespread implementation of image-guidance technologies, the topic is generic and its popularity spreads rapidly within surgical oncology.

Keywords: Image-guided surgery; margin detection; medical devices; minimal invasive surgery; molecular imaging; precision surgery; surgical technology.