Introduction
Although intraluminal and transluminal techniques can achieve localized resection of early-stage alimentary tumours, they
do not designate the status of the filtering mesenteric lymph nodes. Natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES)
may however effect sentinel node biopsy from within the peritoneum.
Methods
A transgastric NOTES technique was utilized in six pigs. A conventional double-channel gastroscope created both the 12mm anterior
gastrotomy and the pneumoperitoneum and enabled peritoneoscopy. The sigmoid colon was fully exposed by an intracolonic magnet
under extracorporeal control. Colonoscopy facilitated submucosal injection of methylene blue dye (3 ml) at the apex of the
sigmoid loop under direct transgastric vision. The mesocolon was searched for blue-stained lymph channels and nodes, the latter
being resected and retrieved by the intraperitoneal endoscope. At procedure end, three pigs underwent immediate laparotomy
for scrutiny of the operation site while three were survived for forensic laparotomy on postoperative day 14.
Results
Each procedure was a technical success. Gastrotomy, pneumoperitoneum, peritoneoscopy and sigmoid exposure were promptly achieved
(mean 9.2 min). Post-injection, blue lymphatics identifying specific nodes were immediately appreciable and these could be
dissected cleanly and retrieved intact per oram. Mean lymphadenectomy time was 19 (range 12–32) min. All survival animals
thrived during convalescence. At laparotomy, there was neither mesentery penetration, bowel ischemia nor mesenteric hematoma/hemorrhage
in any pig and no residual blue stained nodes in those sacrificed early.
Conclusion
Sentinel node biopsy can be performed without abdominal wall transgression. Thus potentially the oncological proprietary of
local resectional techniques may be augmented while preserving their ideals and dividends.
Keywords NOTES - Sentinel node - Lymphatic mapping - Early-stage colon cancer