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Augusta University Health & Philips Partner to Streamline Lung Cancer Diagnosis with Hybrid Operating Room

by Jasmine Pennic 09/25/2018 Leave a Comment

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Augusta University Health & Philips Partner to Streamline Lung Cancer Diagnosis with Hybrid Operating Room

Today, Philips and Augusta University Health announced a long-term partnership to expedite the diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer with a hybrid operating room. Knowing early detection is key to a patient’s survival, the hybrid operating room combines three techniques into a single appointment with a multidisciplinary team, eliminating the delays of multiple clinical visits. 

The hybrid operating room pilot has shown promising results, such as:

– Prior to this, it could take up to six weeks just to get a diagnosis in a traditional operating room. Now, the patient’s care plan can be tailored in a single day.

– The model brings three techniques into a single space: navigational bronchoscopy, percutaneous biopsy, and video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. This enables the detection of smaller tumors in a person’s lungs, which previously would have to grow larger or more dense to be detected.

– All three techniques are assisted by intra-operative cone beam CT imaging, which captures images of the inside of a person’s chest and allows the surgeon to see the tumor and determine the best pathway to remove it safely.

“Before I started using the hybrid operating room, it could take up to six weeks just to get a diagnosis,” said Dr. Carsten Schroeder, the thoracic surgical oncologist at the Georgia Cancer Center and Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University. “Having the hybrid OR and all of its technologies at Augusta University Health allows me to tailor the patient’s care plan in one day instead of having to schedule multiple follow-up appointments.”

“The reasoning behind using the hybrid OR is to present a more efficient workup and treatment process to ultimately benefit patient survival,” Schroeder said. “We can do that by shortening the time from diagnosis to treatment while increasing cost-effectiveness and optimizing utilization.”

According to research from the American Cancer Society, one in four cancer deaths can be attributed to lung cancer. This makes it the number one cause of cancer deaths in men and women. The American Cancer Society said lung cancer kills more people each year than breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon cancer combined. One reason why the statistics are so grim, Schroeder said, is that it can be harder to detect and diagnose smaller tumors in the lungs. This means by the time they can be found and treated, they are at a more advance stage.

Since moving his team into the hybrid OR 15 months ago, Schroeder has been collecting data on the outcomes of his patients. The data compiled included 25 patients. His findings, which he said show a paradigm shift in patient care, were published in Innovations: Technology and Techniques in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery in August 2018.

“Additionally, we reviewed the medical charts of 11 patients,” he said. “Each of those patients underwent a same-day bronchoscopy, CT-guided biopsy, and surgical resection, if indicated, in the hybrid OR.”

Of those 11 patients, 10 had a successful diagnosis in one setting. Six of those 11 were diagnosed with the cone beam CT-guided biopsy. Four of those six patients went on to have a surgical resection of their lung to have the nodule removed.

“Not only does the hybrid OR allow us to decrease the time between diagnosis and treatment, but it also allows us to detect smaller tumors in a person’s lungs,” Schroeder said. “Before, we would have to wait for the tumor to grow larger or increase in density.”

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Tagged With: Lung Cancer, Philips

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