Literature DB >> 18597146

Quality of life after sentinel lymph node biopsy or axillary lymph node dissection in stage I/II breast cancer patients: a prospective longitudinal study.

Jan Kootstra1, Josette E H M Hoekstra-Weebers, Hans Rietman, Jaap de Vries, Peter Baas, Jan H B Geertzen, Harald J Hoekstra.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer patients' quality of life (QoL) after surgery has been reported to improve significantly over time. Little is known about QoL recovery after sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in comparison to axillary lymph node dissection (ALND).
METHODS: 175 of 195 stage I/II breast cancer patients completed the EORTC QLQ-C30: one day before surgery (T0) and after 6 (T1), 26 (T2), 52 (T3) and 104 (T4) weeks. Of these, 54 patients underwent SLNB, 56 SLNB+ALND and 65 ALND. General linear models and paired T-tests between T0-T4 and T1-T4 were computed. Complications, radiotherapy and systemic therapy were added to the model.
RESULTS: Significant time effects were found on physical, role and emotional functioning. Physical and role functioning decreased between T0 and T1. At T4, SLNB patients' functioning had increased to their T0 level; ALND (+/- SLNB) patients' functioning had increased, but had not improved to T0 level. Emotional functioning increased linearly between T0 and T4. At T4, emotional functioning was significantly higher in all groups as compared with T0. No significant group or interaction (time x group) effects were found. Complications and chemotherapy had a significant negative effect on role, emotional and cognitive functioning. Complications had a significant effect on social functioning also. Effect sizes varied between 0.00 and 0.06.
CONCLUSION: Two years post surgery, breast cancer patients' QoL is comparable to that shortly before surgery. Women rated their emotional functioning as even better. SLNB is not associated with a better QoL than ALND. However, undergoing systemic therapy and/or experiencing complications affects QoL negatively.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18597146      PMCID: PMC2518082          DOI: 10.1245/s10434-008-9996-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol        ISSN: 1068-9265            Impact factor:   5.344


One in eight women will be confronted with breast cancer during their life.1 Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women in Western countries. At present, the incidence of breast cancer in Europe is 94.3 per 100,000. With a mortality of 26.0 per 100,000, breast cancer is the most frequent cause of death in women.2 However, due to breast cancer screening and new adjuvant systemic and/or hormone therapies survival after breast cancer has improved by 7–11% over the past few years.3–5 Consequently, the group of breast cancer survivors is gradually increasing, making it increasingly important to gain insight into their quality of life. In general, the quality of life of breast cancer survivors is reported to be good and comparable with that of the normal population.6–15 However, 20–30% of breast cancer survivors continue to have problems adjusting or experience a decreased quality of life.16 It is therefore essential to identify risk factors for poorer functioning. As far as treatment characteristics are concerned, it has been reported that women who underwent a mastectomy17 and/or (adjuvant) systemic therapy had a lower quality of life than women who did not receive these therapies.6,18–21 However, other research groups did not find any difference in quality of life between these groups.13,22 In addition, adjuvant radiotherapy, particularly to the axilla, was found to be related to functional problems in the arm and shoulder.23 In the 1990s, axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) was replaced by sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in breast cancer patients with a clinically and ultrasound-negative axilla.24,25 With the aid of SLNB, it is possible to identify positive axillary lymph nodes in a minimally invasive manner. Nowadays, SLNB is a proven safe surgical method that causes less morbidity than ALND.26–29 In about one-third to three-quarters of breast cancer patients, SLNB prevents unnecessary staging dissection of the axillary lymph nodes.30–36 Several studies compared quality of life between patients who underwent ALND and women who underwent SLNB.37–43 These studies showed that the SLNB women experienced a comparable or better quality of life than the ALND patients. However, these studies had limitations, such as the use of nonvalidated questionnaires, only one postoperative measurement was performed, lack of clarity about the stage of breast cancer in the study population, or obscure information about the level of axillary lymph node dissection. Four of these studies obtained longitudinal data on quality of life and had a prospective design.39,41–43 The limitations in these studies were small population size,41 or that groups were treated according to the intention-to-treat principle, which implies that the SLNB group also contained SLNB-positive patients who underwent secondary ALND or radiotherapy to the axilla.39,42 The aim of the present study was to measure the course of quality of life over a period of 2 years in women with stage I or II breast cancer who underwent SLNB, or SLNB followed by ALND (SLNB+ALND), or ALND. It was assumed that (1) quality of life after treatment for breast cancer would improve over the course of time and (2) that there would be fewer limitations in quality of life postoperatively after SLNB than after SLNB+ALND or ALND. This study formes part of a larger study on functional shoulder complaints after breast cancer treatment.44

Methods

Patients

Over a 2-year period, all the women suspected of having stage I or II breast cancer at the University Medical Centre Groningen (UMCG) and the Martini Hospital Groningen (MZ) were informed by the nurse practitioner about and invited to participate in a prospective study on quality of life following breast cancer treatment. Exclusion criteria were distant metastases and pre-existing shoulder complaints that had been treated surgically, with medication or physiotherapy. All the participants gave written informed consent. The patients filled in the first questionnaire at the hospital on the day before surgery (T0). Postoperative questionnaires were sent to the patients 2 weeks before each follow-up appointment, at 6 weeks (T1), 6 months (T2), 1 year (T3) and 2 years (T4). Questionnaires were filled in at home and returned to us in a stamped addressed envelope, or brought along to the outpatient check-up. The study was approved by the Medical Ethics Committees (METCs) at the two hospitals.

Treatment

The breast cancer patients underwent SLNB, SLNB+ALND, or ALND. SNLB was conducted as described previously.45 When lymph node metastases were found in the SLNB, level I–II ALND was performed within 2 weeks. Surgical treatment consisted of breast-conserving treatment or mastectomy. All the women who underwent breast-conserving treatment received postoperative radiotherapy to the breast. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy, hormonal treatment and/or locoregional radiotherapy was given according to the national guidelines.46

Questionnaires

Quality of life was measured using the EORTC-QLQ C-30, developed by the European Organisation in Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) study group. It is a frequently used (nationally and internationally), validated, 30-question cancer-specific health-related questionnaire.47 In this study, we analysed the global quality of life score and the five functional scales (physical, role, cognitive, emotional and social). Each item has four answer categories: 1 = not at all, 2 = a little, 3 = rather a lot, 4 = very much. Scores were transformed into a scale from 0 to 100 according to the manual, on which a higher global quality-of-life score and higher functional scores corresponded with better quality of life.48

Statistical Analysis

Descriptive analyses were used to evaluate the study groups. χ 2 and T-tests were used to compare the women who underwent SLNB to the other two groups (SLNB+ALND and ALND) at T0. A general linear model (GLM) procedure analysed longitudinal time, group (SLNB, SLNB+ALND and ALND) and interaction (time × group) effects on the EORTC-QLQ-C30 subscales. The level of clinical relevance was calculated using the effect size, in which an effect size of 0.20–0.49 reflected a small clinically relevant difference, an effect size of between 0.50–0.80 reflected a moderate clinically relevant difference and >0.80 reflected a large clinically relevant difference.49 To evaluate whether recovery occurred and/or returned to the preoperative level (T0–T4) and whether postoperative recovery was significant (T1–T4), paired T-tests were used. A difference of 5–10 points on the quality-of-life subscale of the EORTC-QLQ-C30 meant a small clinically relevant difference, a difference of 10–20 points meant a moderate clinically relevant difference and a difference of >20 points meant a large clinically relevant difference.50 All the statistical procedures were carried out with SPSS 14. Differences were significant at a p value of 0.05 or smaller.

Results

Only six patients decided not to participate in the study before their operation. A total of 203 patients filled in the preoperative assessment. The surgical findings in eight patients showed that they did not meet the inclusion criteria: three patients had a benign tumour, two patients had ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), two patients had a stage 4 tumour and in one patient the primary tumour could not be identified. Consequently, 195 out of 201 eligible patients (response rate 97%) were included in the study. It was found that three patients had not fully completed the preoperative questionnaire. At T1, 6 weeks after surgery, 190 (97%) patients returned the questionnaire; at T2, 6 months after surgery, 186 patients returned the questionnaire; at T3, 1 year after surgery, 181 (93%) returned the questionnaire; at T4, 2 years after surgery, 175 (90%) returned the questionnaire. Reasons why the 20 patients (7 SLNB, 3 SLNB+ALND, 10 ALND) dropped out were: seven had died from the disease (1 SLNB, 3 SLNB+ALND, 3 ALND), one SLNB patient was found to have distant metastases at T4, one ALND patient was excluded because of breast reconstruction, four patients had missing values (1 SLNB, 3 ALND) and seven patients dropped out because of lack of interest (4 SLNB, 3 ALND) (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1

Flow chart of patients.

Flow chart of patients. In the remaining group of 175 patients, 110 had undergone SLNB (63%). The biopsy had been positive in 56 patients (51%) and followed by ALND (Fig. 1). Therefore, the SLNB group was comprised of 54 patients (31%), the SLNB+ALND group was comprised of 56 patients (32%) and the ALND group was comprised of 65 patients (37%). Patient characteristics of these 175 women are shown in Table 1. Average age at inclusion was 56 years (standard deviation [SD] 11 years); there was no significant difference in age between the three groups. All lumpectomy patients and 11 mastectomy patients received radiotherapy. Tumour–node–metastasis (TNM) classification, breast surgery, complications, radiotherapy and systemic therapy differed between the groups (p varied between <0.001 to 0.011). Therefore, the variables complications (yes/no), systemic therapy (yes/no) and radiotherapy (yes/no) were included in the analyses. A second series of analyses was performed in which radiotherapy was replaced by type of surgery because of overlap between the variables radiotherapy and type of surgery. TNM classification determines the adjuvant treatment protocol (radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy) and was therefore not included.
Table 1

Patient characteristics

VariableSLNB(N = 54)SLNB+ALND (N = 56)ALND(N = 65)Test value P
Age, years
    Mean (SD)58.1 (11.8)53.75 (9.9)56.5 (11.1)F = 2.19d 0.124
TNM classificationa N (%) N (%) N (%) χ 2 = 49.24<0.001e
    Stage I41 (76)8 (14)28 (43)
    Stage II A12 (22)42 (75)25 (38)
    Stage II B1 (2)6 (11)12 (19)
Breast surgery χ 2 = 15.28<0.001
    BCTb 37 (69)40 (71)26 (40)
    Mastectomy17 (31)16 (29)39 (60)
Complications χ 2 = 9.070.011f
    No49 (90)38 (68)47 (72)
    Yes
        > 4 weeks seroma 2 (4)6 (11)10 (16)
        Inflammationc 3 (6)12 (21)8 (12)
Radiotherapy χ 2 = 10.630.005g
    No17 (31)12 (21)32 (49)
    Yes
        Breast37 (69)39 (70)26 (40)
        Breast and axilla0 (0)5 (9)7 (11)
Systemic therapy χ 2 = 39.89<0.001h
    No40 (74)8 (14)29 (45)
    Yes
    Chemo + tamoxifen −4 (8)8 (14)13 (20)
    Chemo + tamoxifen +5 (9)21 (38)8 (12)
    Chemo − tamoxifen +5 (9)19 (34)15 (23)

TNM, tumour node metastasis; BCT, breast-conserving therapy; inflammation treated with antibiotics; one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); patients diagnosed with breast cancer stage I versus IIa and IIb; no complications versus complications; no radiotherapy versus radiotherapy; no systemic therapy versus systemic therapy.

Patient characteristics TNM, tumour node metastasis; BCT, breast-conserving therapy; inflammation treated with antibiotics; one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); patients diagnosed with breast cancer stage I versus IIa and IIb; no complications versus complications; no radiotherapy versus radiotherapy; no systemic therapy versus systemic therapy.

Quality of Life

At T0, there were no significant differences in the scores on the EORTC-QLQ-C30 subscales between the three groups. Significant time effects were found for physical, role and emotional functioning (Table 2 and Fig. 2). Emotional functioning improved linearly over the course of time; physical and role functioning decreased between T0 and T1, increased between T1 and T2 and then stabilised. No significant group or time × group interaction effects were found. The effect sizes of time, group and interaction effects varied from 0.000 for the group effect in global quality of life to 0.060 for the time effect in emotional functioning (Table 2).
Table 2

General linear model (GLM)

VariableEffect F P Effect size
gQoLTime0.210.9350.001
Groupa 0.010.9930.000
Interactionb 1.140.3310.013
Complications2.810.0950.016
Radiotherapy0.100.7540.001
Systemic therapy1.160.2030.010
PhysicalTime3.98 0.003 0.023
Group0.200.8230.002
Interaction1.570.1290.019
Complications0.840.3610.005
Radiotherapy0.240.6250.001
Systemic therapy0.570.4350.003
RoleTime4.26 0.002 0.025
Group0.530.5880.006
Interaction1.040.4080.012
Complications5.85 0.017 0.033
Radiotherapy0.090.7620.001
Systemic therapy5.45 0.021 0.031
EmotionalTime10.66 <0.001 0.060
Group0.160.8490.002
Interaction0.500.8570.006
Complications10.87 0.001 0.061
Radiotherapy0.770.3830.005
Systemic therapy5.00 0.027 0.029
CognitiveTime1.350.2840.008
Group0.460.6330.005
Interaction1.290.2450.015
Complications7.38 0.007 0.042
Radiotherapy0.040.8500.000
Systemic therapy4.97 0.027 0.029
SocialTime1.420.2250.008
Group0.300.7410.004
Interaction0.440.8990.005
Complications6.68 0.011 0.038
Radiotherapy2.940.0890.017
Systemic therapy3.310.0710.019

gQoL, global quality of life; group = SLNB, ALND, or SLNB+ALND; interaction = effect of time × group.

The values are in bold since they are significant and facilitate reading.

Fig. 2

EORTC-QLQ-C30 global quality of life and the five functional scales.

General linear model (GLM) gQoL, global quality of life; group = SLNB, ALND, or SLNB+ALND; interaction = effect of time × group. The values are in bold since they are significant and facilitate reading. EORTC-QLQ-C30 global quality of life and the five functional scales. Complications and systemic therapy had significant effects on role, emotional and cognitive functioning; complications also had a significant effect on social functioning. The women who had complications and/or systemic therapy reported poorer functioning than the women without complications and/or systemic therapy. Radiotherapy did not have any significant effect on the EORTC subscales (Table 2), nor did type of breast surgery (data not shown). The effect sizes of these factors varied between 0.000 and 0.061. At T4, physical and role functioning were significantly poorer (decrease of between 5–10 points) in the SLNB+ALND and ALND groups than at T0. Emotional functioning at T4 was significantly better in all three groups (increase of between 10–20 points) than at T0. Cognitive functioning was significantly better (increase of less than 5 points) in the SLNB group than at T0 (Table 3).
Table 3

Characteristics of the EORTC-QLQ-C30 scales at the different assessment times and paired T-tests

VariablePaired T-test
T0T1T2T3T4T0–T4T1–T4
MeanSDMeanSDMeanSDMeanSDMeanSD P P
gQoLa SLNB77.920.377.817.178.719.481.019.480.719.90.2640.254
SLNB+ALND81.218.471.523.676.118.177.320.876.219.50.0860.132
ALND80.015.670.518.276.717.281.020.681.017.50.692 <0.001
PhysicalSLNB88.812.382.017.086.913.586.714.188.114.20.669 0.002
SLNB+ALND92.69.982.716.187.513.386.913.784.318.1 <0.001 0.540
ALND92.310.679.615.284.814.086.912.986.513.5 0.001 <0.001
RoleSLNB92.918.280.622.687.319.492.316.192.014.00.766 <0.001
SLNB+ALND90.717.068.424.383.922.985.120.783.626.1 0.024 <0.001
ALND93.313.766.926.782.521.788.916.485.621.8 0.014 <0.001
EmotionalSLNB72.120.084.917.487.715.386.115.389.019.5 <0.001 0.069
SLNB+ALND69.420.577.424.381.922.081.923.782.421.6 <0.001 0.067
ALND70.818.581.518.684.318.586.517.589.312.3 <0.001 0.003
CognitiveSLNB86.715.788.614.892.314.492.014.091.013.6 0.038 0.280
SLNB+ALND88.614.282.117.985.119.282.719.585.117.60.1220.279
ALND85.816.779.722.185.318.985.620.888.419.50.297 <0.001
SocialSLNB94.410.289.218.193.513.995.79.894.113.00.859 0.038
SLNB+ALND90.718.580.622.887.219.390.119.088.320.30.446 0.013
ALND91.215.084.819.290.716.193.817.394.614.40.129 <0.001

Global quality of life; SD, standard deviation; T0, presurgery; T1, 6 weeks post-surgery; T2, 6 months post-surgery; T3, 12 months post-surgery; T4, 24 months post-surgery.

The values are in bold since they are significant and facilitate reading.

Characteristics of the EORTC-QLQ-C30 scales at the different assessment times and paired T-tests Global quality of life; SD, standard deviation; T0, presurgery; T1, 6 weeks post-surgery; T2, 6 months post-surgery; T3, 12 months post-surgery; T4, 24 months post-surgery. The values are in bold since they are significant and facilitate reading. In the ALND group, global quality of life (increase of between 10–20 points), emotional and cognitive functioning (increases of between 5–10 points) were significantly higher at T4 than at T1. In the SLNB and ALND groups, physical functioning was significantly better (increase of between 5–10 points) at T4 than at T1. Role functioning (increase of between 10–20 points) and social functioning (increase of less than 5 points in the SNLB group, 5–10 points in the SLNB+ALND group and ALND group) were significantly better at T4 than at T1 (Table 3).

Discussion

This longitudinal study evaluated the quality of life of women with stage I or II breast cancer who were disease free 24 months after surgery. Comparisons were made between three groups of women who were classified according to the treatment received: SLNB, SLNB+ALND or ALND. It was assumed that quality of life would improve over the course of time and that the women who had undergone SLNB would experience better quality of life than the women who had undergone SLNB+ALND or ALND. Significant changes over time were found on three subscales of the EORTC. Patterns of change differed between the three subscales. Directly after the operation, women reported their physical and role functioning to be poorer than preoperatively. These improved over the course of time. Changes over time were significant, but the clinical relevance was negligible. At 24 months after the operation, functioning in the women who had undergone ALND (+/– SLNB) was poorer than preoperatively (small clinical difference). This contradicts an earlier study that demonstrated that, after 18 months, the functioning of women who had been treated with SLNB or ALND was comparable to the preoperative level.39 However, and in line with that study, we found that, in the women who had undergone SLNB, functioning at 24 months after the operation was comparable with the preoperative situation. Emotional functioning was at the lowest level preoperatively in all three groups of women, but gradually improved with time. It is not surprising that the women experienced high levels of psychological stress after hearing the diagnosis of breast cancer, in view of the life-threatening nature of the disease. All the women who participated in this study were disease free at 24 months after surgery, which suggests that treatment was successful. This seems to be reflected in their improved emotional functioning. The greatest improvement in emotional functioning was seen at the first check-up, 6 weeks after the operation. The improvement in emotional functioning over the 24 months after surgery was moderate in clinical terms in all three groups. An earlier study did not find any significant improvement in emotional functioning over time.41 Overall, there were no differences in quality of life between the women treated with SLNB, SLNB+ALND or ALND. This was in agreement with several other studies.41–43 However, our results were discordant with those of the axillary lymphatic mapping against nodal axillary clearance (ALMANAC) trial, in which the women who underwent SLNB experienced better quality of life than the women who underwent ALND.39 These results were striking, because the SLNB group in the ALMANAC trial was not homogeneous. Owing to the intention-to-treat principle, it included women with a positive SLNB, adjuvant ALND or axillary radiotherapy. Furthermore, in the ALMANAC trial, ALND was performed to level III, in contrast with our level II, which may have led to more morbidity and lower quality of life. Lastly, in our study, we included in our analyses treatment-related variables that were found to differ between the groups. The women who had systemic therapy and/or complications reported poorer quality of life on some of the subscales than those without. It appeared that adjustments in QoL were not so much related to the surgical treatment (SLNB or ALND), but to these treatment-related variables. Neither radiotherapy nor type of breast surgery had any significant effect on functioning according to the reports made by the women. Earlier publications showed an effect of chemotherapy and an effect of radiotherapy.51–53 The literature is largely in line with our finding that there is no advantage in quality of life of lumpectomy over mastectomy.54 On the whole it should be noted that comparisons with the literature were hampered by differences in study design and measurement instruments (Table 4).
Table 4

Overview of results from longitudinal studies on quality of life comparing SLNB, SLNB+ALND and ALND in breast cancer patients

StudyYearDesignAssessment timesStudy groupsMeasurement instrumentResults
SLNBS+Ac ALND
Peintinger et al.41 2003Prospective

T0: pre-surgery

T1: post-surgery

T2: 9–12 months

2531EORTC-QLQ-C30(functional scales and global QoL)At T1 SLNB patients reported higher global QoL than at T0. At T2, both groups reported higher global QoL than at T0. No other time differences were found. No differences between groups were found.
Purushotham et al.42 2005RCT

T0: post-surgery

T1: 3 months

T2: 6 months

T3: 12 months

134a 143SF-36 (physical summary score, physical functioning, vitality)At T0, SLNB patients reported higher on physical summary score, physical functioning and vitality than ALND patients. No differences between groups were found at later follow-up times.
Fleissig et al.39 2006RCT

T0: pre-surgery

T1: 1 months

T2: 3 months

T3: 6 months

T4: 12 months

T5: 18 months

424b 405FACT-B+4 total score, TOISLNB patients reported better QoL at all postoperative measurement times and faster recovery to baseline levels than ALND patients. Decline in TOI was >5 points in the ALND group at T1, T2 and T4. No clinically relevant change in TOI was found in the SLNB group.
Del Bianco et al.43 2007Clinical trial

T0: pre-surgery

T1: 6 months

T2: 12 months

T3: 24 months

159a 151SF-36 (physical and mental summary scores), PGWB (total index and anxiety)No differences between study groups were found in the physical and mental summary scores. At T1, SLNB patients reported a higher mean PGBW score. At later measurement times, no significant differences between groups were found. At T1, T2 and T3 both groups reported a decline in physical summary score compared to T0.
Kootstra et al.2008Prospective

T0: pre-surgery

T1: 6 weeks

T2: 6 months

T3: 12 months

T4: 24 months

545665EORTC-QLQ-C30 (functional scales and global QoL)Significant time effects were found in physical, role and emotional functioning. No significant effects of treatment groups were found on any of the scales. At T4, all patients reported higher emotional functioning than at T0. At T4, ALND patients (+/– SLNB) reported lower physical and role functioning than at T0.

SLNB group included women treated with SLNB+ALND; SLNB group included women treated with SLNB+ALND and women treated with SLNB+ axillary radiotherapy. SLNB followed by ALND; RCT, randomised clinical trial; FACT-B+4, functional assessment cancer therapy breast version 4; TOI, trial outcome index; PGWB, phychological general well-being.

Overview of results from longitudinal studies on quality of life comparing SLNB, SLNB+ALND and ALND in breast cancer patients T0: pre-surgery T1: post-surgery T2: 9–12 months T0: post-surgery T1: 3 months T2: 6 months T3: 12 months T0: pre-surgery T1: 1 months T2: 3 months T3: 6 months T4: 12 months T5: 18 months T0: pre-surgery T1: 6 months T2: 12 months T3: 24 months T0: pre-surgery T1: 6 weeks T2: 6 months T3: 12 months T4: 24 months SLNB group included women treated with SLNB+ALND; SLNB group included women treated with SLNB+ALND and women treated with SLNB+ axillary radiotherapy. SLNB followed by ALND; RCT, randomised clinical trial; FACT-B+4, functional assessment cancer therapy breast version 4; TOI, trial outcome index; PGWB, phychological general well-being. Strong points of our study were the high response rate, the use of a validated disease-specific quality-of-life questionnaire combined with a preoperative assessment, multiple postoperative measurements and a longitudinal analysis on different domains of quality of life. A limitation of the study is that no a priori power analysis was performed. Although attrition was low, the size of the groups may not have been large enough to prevent type I or II errors. However, the clinical relevance of all differences found was negligible in size. It is questionable whether analyses using larger groups would reveal clinically relevant differences.

Conclusion

Physical functioning and role functioning in women with stage I or II breast cancer were lowest directly after the operation, but improved with time. Emotional functioning was lowest preoperatively, but continued to improve postoperatively. There were no differences in quality-of-life domains over the course of time between the patients treated with SLNB, SLNB+ALND or ALND. Women with complications or systemic therapy had poorer role, emotional, cognitive and social functioning than their counterparts without these factors.
  47 in total

Review 1.  Quality of life of breast cancer patients and types of surgery for breast cancer--current status and unresolved issues.

Authors:  Shozo Ohsumi; Kojiro Shimozuma; Kojiro Shimozumai; Katsumasa Kuroi; Michikazu Ono; Hirohisa Imai
Journal:  Breast Cancer       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 4.239

Review 2.  The role of intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy in the management of patients with breast cancer.

Authors:  D W Ollila; M B Brennan; A E Giuliano
Journal:  Adv Surg       Date:  1999

Review 3.  Technique of sentinel node biopsy in breast cancer.

Authors:  E J Rutgers; L Jansen; O E Nieweg; J de Vries; H Schraffordt Koops; B B Kroon
Journal:  Eur J Surg Oncol       Date:  1998-08       Impact factor: 4.424

4.  Chronic arm morbidity after curative breast cancer treatment: prevalence and impact on quality of life.

Authors:  Winkle Kwan; Jeremy Jackson; Lorna M Weir; Carol Dingee; Greg McGregor; Ivo A Olivotto
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2002-10-15       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Post-operative arm morbidity and quality of life. Results of the ALMANAC randomised trial comparing sentinel node biopsy with standard axillary treatment in the management of patients with early breast cancer.

Authors:  Anne Fleissig; Lesley J Fallowfield; Carolyn I Langridge; Leigh Johnson; Robert G Newcombe; J Michael Dixon; Mark Kissin; Robert E Mansel
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2005-09-15       Impact factor: 4.872

6.  Sentinel lymph node biopsy results in less postoperative morbidity compared with axillary lymph node dissection for breast cancer.

Authors:  William E Burak; Scott T Hollenbeck; Emmanuel E Zervos; Karen L Hock; Lisa C Kemp; Donn C Young
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 2.565

7.  Randomized multicenter trial of sentinel node biopsy versus standard axillary treatment in operable breast cancer: the ALMANAC Trial.

Authors:  Robert E Mansel; Lesley Fallowfield; Mark Kissin; Amit Goyal; Robert G Newcombe; J Michael Dixon; Constantinos Yiangou; Kieran Horgan; Nigel Bundred; Ian Monypenny; David England; Mark Sibbering; Tholkifl I Abdullah; Lester Barr; Utheshtra Chetty; Dudley H Sinnett; Anne Fleissig; Dayalan Clarke; Peter J Ell
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2006-05-03       Impact factor: 13.506

8.  Prospective comparison of breast pain in patients participating in a randomized trial of breast-conserving surgery and tamoxifen with or without radiotherapy.

Authors:  Gamal Rayan; Laura A Dawson; Andrea Bezjak; Anthea Lau; Anthony W Fyles; Qi Long Yi; Pat Merante; Katherine A Vallis
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2003-01-01       Impact factor: 7.038

9.  Quality of life of 5-10 year breast cancer survivors diagnosed between age 40 and 49.

Authors:  Deborah Casso; Diana S M Buist; Stephen Taplin
Journal:  Health Qual Life Outcomes       Date:  2004-05-18       Impact factor: 3.186

10.  Decreased rates of advanced breast cancer due to mammography screening in The Netherlands.

Authors:  J Fracheboud; S J Otto; J A A M van Dijck; M J M Broeders; A L M Verbeek; H J de Koning
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2004-08-31       Impact factor: 7.640

View more
  24 in total

1.  Preoperative prediction of sentinel lymph node metastasis in breast cancer based on radiomics of T2-weighted fat-suppression and diffusion-weighted MRI.

Authors:  Yuhao Dong; Qianjin Feng; Wei Yang; Zixiao Lu; Chunyan Deng; Lu Zhang; Zhouyang Lian; Jing Liu; Xiaoning Luo; Shufang Pei; Xiaokai Mo; Wenhui Huang; Changhong Liang; Bin Zhang; Shuixing Zhang
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2017-08-21       Impact factor: 5.315

Review 2.  The Adventure of Axillary Treatment in Early Stage Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Bekir Kuru
Journal:  Eur J Breast Health       Date:  2020-01-01

3.  Preoperative prediction of sentinel lymph node metastasis in breast cancer by radiomic signatures from dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI.

Authors:  Chunling Liu; Jie Ding; Karl Spuhler; Yi Gao; Mario Serrano Sosa; Meghan Moriarty; Shahid Hussain; Xiang He; Changhong Liang; Chuan Huang
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2018-09-01       Impact factor: 4.813

4.  A Nomogram Based on Molecular Biomarkers and Radiomics to Predict Lymph Node Metastasis in Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Xiaoming Qiu; Yufei Fu; Yu Ye; Zhen Wang; Changjian Cao
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-03-15       Impact factor: 6.244

5.  A Radiomics Model for Preoperative Predicting Sentinel Lymph Node Metastasis in Breast Cancer Based on Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI.

Authors:  Mingming Ma; Yuan Jiang; Naishan Qin; Xiaodong Zhang; Yaofeng Zhang; Xiangpeng Wang; Xiaoying Wang
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-06-06       Impact factor: 5.738

6.  A longitudinal comparison of arm morbidity in stage I-II breast cancer patients treated with sentinel lymph node biopsy, sentinel lymph node biopsy followed by completion lymph node dissection, or axillary lymph node dissection.

Authors:  Jan J Kootstra; Josette E H M Hoekstra-Weebers; Johan S Rietman; Jakob de Vries; Peter C Baas; Jan H B Geertzen; Harald J Hoekstra
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2010-03-11       Impact factor: 5.344

7.  A quantitative comparison of arm activity between survivors of breast cancer and healthy controls: use of accelerometry.

Authors:  Mary Insana Fisher; Claire C Davies; Timothy L Uhl
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2020-02-28       Impact factor: 3.603

8.  Use of indocyanine green for detecting the sentinel lymph node in breast cancer patients: from preclinical evaluation to clinical validation.

Authors:  Chongwei Chi; Jinzuo Ye; Haolong Ding; De He; Wenhe Huang; Guo-Jun Zhang; Jie Tian
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-16       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Quality of life after axillary or groin sentinel lymph node biopsy, with or without completion lymph node dissection, in patients with cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Mattijs de Vries; Harald J Hoekstra; Josette E H M Hoekstra-Weebers
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2009-07-29       Impact factor: 5.344

10.  Impact of sentinel node biopsy on long-term quality of life in breast cancer patients.

Authors:  E De Gournay; A Guyomard; C Coutant; S Boulet; P Arveux; S Causeret; S Gouy; M-M Padeano; C Loustalot; J-M Sauzedde; M Smail; J-P Combier; P Chevillote; C Rosburger; F Bonnetain; J Fraisse; T S Dabakuyo-Yonli
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2013-10-29       Impact factor: 7.640

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.